Konstantin Khabensky

Konstantin Yurievich Khabensky, PAR[1] (Russian: Константин Юрьевич Хабенский; born 11 January 1972) is a Russian actor of stage and film, director and philanthropist.

Konstantin Khabensky
Константин Хабенский
Khabensky in 2022
Born
Konstantin Yurievich Khabensky

(1972-01-11) 11 January 1972 (age 52)
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
  • philanthropist
Years active1994–present
WorksFilmography
TitlePeople's Artist of Russia (2012)
Spouses
Anastasiya Khabenskaya
(m. 2000; died 2008)
Olga Litvinova
(m. 2013)
Children2
AwardsFull list
Website

From 1997 he was part of the Saint Petersburg Lensoviet Theatre cast until 2000, after which he transferred to the Moscow Art Theatre in 2002 where he is still active. Khabensky's first lead roles in cinema were in Women's Property (1999) and in the film In Motion (2002). Among the Russian audience he gained recognition with the TV series Deadly Force (2002-2005), while his international breakthrough came with the films Night Watch (2004) and Day Watch (2006) as the protagonist, Anton Gorodetsky.[2][3]

Other notable films with him in the lead role include Poor Relatives (2005), The Irony of Fate 2 (2007), Collector (2016), TV series Pyotr Leschenko. Everything That Was... (2013), The Method (2015) and Trotsky (2017).

One of the most acclaimed actors in Russia, Khabensky has earned numerous awards, including two Nika Awards for The Admiral (2008) and The Geographer Drank His Globe Away (2013). He has also won three Golden Eagle Awards for Best Actor, three Kinotavr Awards and the Russian Guild of Film Critics Award.

Based on the data of the website KinoPoisk, Konstantin Khabensky was declared to be the most popular actor in Russia in the first 15 years of the 21st century.[4][5]

Khabensky made his directorial debut in 2018 with the Holocaust drama Sobibor where he also played the role of Alexander Pechersky.

Alongside his work in cinema, Khabensky is a philanthropist, in 2008 he established the Konstantin Khabensky Charitable Foundation which provides assistance to children with oncological and other serious brain afflictions.

Early life edit

Was born in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) to Yuri Aronovich Khabensky and Tatiana Gennadievna Khabenskaya (née Nikulina). Both of his parents were engineers, his mother also worked as a mathematics teacher.[6] He has an older sister, Natalia Khabenskaya.[7][8]

In 1981, he together with his family moved to Nizhnevartovsk, where Konstantin lived over the period of four years. In 1985 the family returned to Leningrad.[2][3] After finishing eight classes of secondary school No. 486,[9] Konstantin entered the Technical College of Aviation Instrument Engineering and Automation, but after studying there for three years he realized that this profession was not for him.[6][8] He tried many jobs including as a janitor, cleaner, street musician, and then was hired as a lighting technician at the theatre studio "Subbota" where he later performed for the first time.[10] In 1990 Khabensky entered the Leningrad State Institute of Theatre, Music and Cinema (course of Veniamin Filshtinsky), where his classmates were Mikhail Porechenkov, Andrei Zibrov and Mikhail Trukhin. For the final exam Konstantin performed as Estragon in the play Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett,[11] his graduation was in 1995.[12][13]

Career edit

Early roles (1994–2003) edit

Khabensky's cinematic debut was in the 1994 comedy film To whom will God send where he appeared in a minor role of a pedestrian.

In 1995, after graduating from the Russian State Institute of Performing Arts, Konstantin worked at the Perekriostok Experimental Theater where he served for one year. At the same time he acted in the Lensoviet Theatre in Saint Petersburg.[2]

Konstantin Khabensky moved to Moscow in 1996 to become a stage actor in Satyricon Theatre where he performed in background roles. He worked there for only a few months and returned to the Saint Petersburg Lensoviet Theatre.[8]

Between 1995 and 1996, he worked as presenter of regional TV in the department of music and information programs.[7]

In 1998, he acted in three pictures at once. In the satiric romantic drama directed by Dmitry Meskhiev, Women's Property, Khabensky played the lead role of Andrei Kalinin, a young aspiring actor who decides to seduce the aging actress and professor of a teaching institute Elizaveta Kaminskaya, played by Yelena Safonova. For the role he received the Best Male Actor award at the Gatchina Literature and Cinema Film Festival.[14] Khabensky also starred in the Russian-Hungarian criminal fantasy melodrama of Tomas Toth Natasha and had an uncredited role of a musician in the social drama of Aleksei German, Khrustalyov, My Car!.

The actor said that he got his first roles by chance. The role in Natasha went to the actor after a meeting with the Hungarian director Tomas Toth. "We talked, recalls Konstantin, he asked: "Will you act?" - I said: "I will!" Then we drank vodka. And so began work in the cinema." He was cast in the picture Women's Property in a similar way. The actor recalls: "I go downstairs to the studio, some man rises up, comes across and looks at me: "Somehow I do not know you!" - I answer: "I do not know you either!" - and we parted. And then people came up to me and said that it was director Dima Meskhiev and that I was approved for the role in his new film Women's Property.[3]

The following year, Konstantin played a small role in Nikolai Lebedev's thriller The Admirer (1999). The next notable work in the cinema was the main role in the drama of Vladimir Fokin's House for the Rich (2000). Next year he played in another film by Dmitry Meskhiev, comedy-drama Mechanical Suite.

Khabensky received wide recognition among Russian television viewers after he was cast as investigator Igor Plakhov in the crime procedural comedy-drama series Deadly Force (2000-2005).[10][15][16]

Another important role was of Sasha Guriev in the picture In Motion (2002), directorial debut of Filipp Yankovsky. The film was about a successful and charming journalist who suddenly realizes that he has found compromising evidence on his politician friend. For the role he received the Best Male Actor award at the Vivat, Russian Cinema festival.[2]

In 2003 he played musician Kostya, similar in looks to John Lennon, in the television series Lines of Fate directed by Dmitry Meskhiev.In the same year, he had the supporting role of journalist Gosha in comedy Peculiarities of National Politics, also by the aforementioned director.

Since 2003, Khabensky has been a member of Moscow Art Theatre stage cast, and a lead actor in Alexander Vampilov's Duck Hunting (Zilov), Mikhail Bulgakov's The White Guard (Alexey Turbin) and Hamlet (Claudius).[17]

Night Watch and breakthrough edit

After starring as magician Anton Gorodetsky in the blockbuster fantasy films Night Watch (2004) and Day Watch (2005) directed by Timur Bekmambetov, Khabensky became famous worldwide. The films are about the struggle between respective supernatural forces that control daytime and nighttime – Light Others and Dark Others. Both films became box office successes, with the duology grossing $73 million internationally. Bekmambetov described that he needed an actor for the role of Gorodetsky who was handsome, slightly naive, slightly cunning and that "his eyes must show that he has a conscience".[18] The character of the film Anton Gorodetsky became one of his most well-known roles and the success of these films in Russia and abroad has made Khabensky one of the best-known Russian actors in the West.

Khabensky reunited with Meskhiev for the fifth time in Our Own (2004), a World War II drama film where he played political commissar Livshitz. In the same year he also had a supporting role in Goddess: How I fell in Love by Renata Litvinova.

In 2005, he played in Filipp Yankovsky's historical mystery film The State Counsellor, adaptation of the novel of the same name by Boris Akunin. His character in the film was Green (Grigory Grinberg), a revolutionary who attempts to murder the governor of Moscow. For this role, he received his first Golden Eagle Award, as best supporting actor.[19]

In the same year, he acted in two works by Pavel Lungin — comedy film Poor Relatives about a grifter and TV miniseries The Case of "Dead Souls" loosely based on various stories by Nikolai Gogol, including Dead Souls. Leslie Felperin from Variety wrote in her review of Poor Relatives — "Although largely an ensemble piece, thesp Khabensky, a ubiquitous presence in Russian films these days, steals the show with his shambling, sleazeball Letov, demonstrating excellent, previously underexposed comic timing as well as a knack for deadpan and slapstick."[20] Khabensky received the Best Male Actor award from Kinotavr and Russian Guild of Film Critics (Golden Aries).[21][22]

Khabensky had a supporting role as Leon Trotsky in the miniseries Yesenin, which told the conspiracy version of the death of the Russian poet Sergei Yesenin, played by Sergei Bezrukov. Konstantin would later revisit the character in the 2018 biographical series. Also in 2005, Khabensky appeared in the television series The Fall of the Empire and Female Novel.

In 2006, the actor starred in the film Rush Hour directed by Oleg Fesenko and based on the novel by Jerzy Stawiński. In the same year aired the television series Filipp's Bay, in which Khabensky was filmed in parallel with the shooting of Day Watch.[23]

In 2007, Khabensky played Kostya Lukashin opposite Elizaveta Boyarskaya in Timur Bekmambetov's romantic-comedy The Irony of Fate 2, sequel to 1976 Soviet classic The Irony of Fate. Its plot centered around the grown-up children of Evgeniy Lukashin and Nadezhda Sheveleva who have managed to get into the same situation as their parents many years ago. The film made $55 million against a $5 million budget, with $49 million coming from the Russian box-office alone. For the film he earned the Best Comedy Actor prize at the MTV Russia Movie Awards.[2]

Also in 2007, he appeared as Denis Maltsev in thriller The Russian Triangle by Aleko Tsabadze which was about two brothers who survive brutal torture and Chechen captivity.

In 2008, Khabensky reunited with Elizaveta Boyarskaya to film the 2008 biographical movie The Admiral by Andrei Kravchuk. He portrayed Alexander Kolchak, vice-admiral in the Imperial Russian Navy and leader of the anti-communist White Movement during the Russian Civil War. The film earned $38 million at the box-office. Khabensky was recognized as best actor at the MTV Russia Movie Awards and Golden Eagle Awards.[24][25]

In the same year, he played Anton Prachenko in suspense film The Ghost by Karen Oganesyan. The picture was about a crime novelist in a creative crisis who becomes an unwitting witness to a murder and whose fate becomes linked with the hired killer who committed it, played by Vladimir Mashkov.

2009–2014 edit

Konstantin Khabensky being awarded the title People's Artist of Russia in 2012 by President Vladimir Putin

Khabensky appeared in the 2009 mystical drama The Miracle by Aleksandr Proshkin. The film was inspired by the urban legend of Zoya who after dancing with an icon of Saint Nicholas became paralyzed.

In 2010, he played Vyacheslav Kolotilov in the comedy Lucky Trouble which co-starred Milla Jovovich and was directed by Levan Gabriadze. The film was about a school teacher traveling to Moscow to get married but who on his way there is mistaken for a football coach which puts him in danger of missing his own wedding.

In the supernatural courtroom drama series Heavenly Court made in 2011, he played the character of Andrei who dies and becomes a prosecutor in the afterlife. He also appeared in children's film Fairytale.Is and historical picture Raspoutine during the same year.

The following year, he played the role of Alexei Turbin in the miniseries The White Guard, based on the novel of the same name by Mikhail Bulgakov.

Konstantin played alcoholic geography teacher Victor Sluzhkin in the 2013 adventure drama The Geographer Drank His Globe Away directed by Alexander Veledinsky. It was based on the eponymous novel by Alexei Ivanov. His acting received considerable praise in Russia and abroad. Ronnie Scheib from Variety wrote that "thanks to Konstantin Khabensky’s charismatic, sardonic performance as Victor, even personal deterioration proves fascinating and consistently entertaining".[26] Khabensky won the Best Actor prize at Kinotavr, Russian Guild of Film Critics Awards, Nika Awards and the Golden Eagle Awards.[27][28][29][30]

In the same year, he portrayed singer Pyotr Leschenko in the biographical musical television series Pyotr Leschenko. Everything That Was.... Konstantin Khabensky took singing classes to prepare for the shooting, and performed all the songs himself in the series.[31]

He starred opposite Svetlana Khodchenkova in the 2014 movie The Adventurers about underwater diving treasure hunters. Konstantin Khabensky did scuba diving for many years,[32] but during one scene his gas cylinder was not filled with air by crew members which caused the actor to almost drown.[33]

Also in 2014, Khabensky appeared as officer of the Tsarist army in Yolki 1914. The picture was part of the comedy anthology film series Yolki, where he has served as narrator in all installments.

2015–present edit

Konstantin Khabensky receiving an honorary award for achievements in cinema in 2018, Prague

In 2015, Khabensky was cast as police investigator Rodion Meglin who doubles as a vigilante in the crime drama series The Method directed by Yuri Bykov and produced by Sreda. For the role he received the TEFI award as best actor of a television series.[34]

In 2016, he played an employee of a collecting firm in the thriller Collector directed by Alexey Krasovsky where he was the only actor on screen. Russian edition of The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "a brilliant solo performance with one of the best Russian actors of our time".[35] For the film he received the Best Actor award at Kinotavr[36] and at the Prague Independent Film Festival.[37][38][39]

In the same year, he did a turn as the protagonist's eccentric father in the teen comedy The Good Boy by Oksana Karas. He also appeared in the Austrian film Fly Away Home, based on the biographical novel of the same name by Christine Nöstlinger. For the German-speaking role of Cohn, he had to learn his lines phonetically.[40]

In 2017, Khabensky played the role of fighter pilot Pavel Belyayev opposite Yevgeny Mironov in the historical drama film The Age of Pioneers about the first spacewalk, directed by Dmitriy Kiselev.

Konstantin starred in another Sreda production in 2018 – he portrayed revolutionary Leon Trotsky in the biographical miniseries Trotsky, directed by Alexander Kott and Konstantin Statsky. For the role he received the Best Male Actor award from the Association of Film and Television Producers in Russia.[41]

Also in 2018, he starred in a dual role in Selfie, based on the novel Soulless of the 21st century. Selfie by Sergey Minaev. The film tells the story of a popular writer and TV presenter Vladimir Bogdanov who is suddenly replaced with an absolute double.

Konstantin Khabensky's directorial debut Sobibor, where he also plays the lead role of Alexander Pechersky was released in 2018. The film is a World War II drama about the only successful uprising in a Nazi death camp. It also stars Christopher Lambert.[citation needed] The film was selected in 2018 as the Russian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards.[42]

Hollywood roles edit

He took part in several American movies such as Wanted (2008), Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011), World War Z (2013) and Black Sea (2014).

In World War Z, Konstantin's role as Russian soldier was cut due to re-shooting of the 30 Minutes of the ending.[43][44][45]

Khabensky has admitted that the language barrier stopped him from taking on serious roles in Hollywood.[46][10]

Personal life edit

Konstantin Khabensky was married to radio-journalist Anastasiya Khabenskaya from 12 January 2000, until her death at age 33 from a brain tumor on 3 December 2008. He has one son by her, Ivan, who was born in Moscow on 25 September 2007. In Russia he lives in Moscow and St. Petersburg.In 2013 Khabensky married actress Olga Litvinova[47] and on 3 June 2016, she gave birth to their daughter.[48]

He avoids discussing his personal life and has said that he does not see the need to demonstrate it to the press.[6]

In March 2022, he condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[49]

Philanthropy edit

In 2008, he established the Konstantin Khabensky Charitable Foundation (Russian: Благотворительный Фонд Константина Хабенского, romanized: Blagotvoritelny Fond Konstantina Khabenskogo) which provides assistance to children with oncological and other serious brain afflictions.[50]

Since 2010, Khabensky has been opening non-profit studios of creative development throughout Russia. Once a year Konstantin conducts a festival with all participants of the studios under the name "Operenie".[2]

In the media edit

GQ Russia magazine chose him as Actor of the Year in 2003 and 2016.[51]

In 2017, the Russian Public Opinion Research Center named Khabensky together with Sergei Bezrukov, as the most popular actor in Russia.[52][53]

According to the detailed analytical review of Russian cinema by Yandex in 2017 based on the data of the website KinoPoisk, Konstantin Khabensky was declared to be the most popular actor in Russia in the first 15 years of the 21st century.[4][5]

For a number of years, he was cited as a sex symbol by various media outlets in Russia.[54][55][56]

Awards and nominations edit

AwardYearCategoryNominated WorkResult
Saint-Petersburg Independent Actor Award named after Vladislav Strzhelchik[2]1999"Actors' Ensemble" (together with Mikhail Porechenkov, Mikhail Trukhin and Andrei Zibrov)Waiting for Godot (staged by Yuri Butusov at the Lensoviet Theater)Won
Gatchina Literature and Cinema Film Festival[14]Best ActorWomen's PropertyWon
XI Festival "Vivat, Russian Cinema"[2]2002In MotionWon
GQ Russia[51]2003Actor of the YearWon
Kinotavr[21]2005Best ActorPoor RelativesWon
Golden Aries[22]Won
Theatrical Award "Seagull"[2]Best Performer of the Antagonist RoleHamlet (staged by Yuri Butusov for the Moscow Art Theater)Won
Golden Eagle Award[19]Best Supporting ActorThe State CounsellorWon
The Stanislavsky Prize (theatrical season 2006–2007) at the 12th International Stanislavsky Theater Festival in Moscow[2]2007"Mastery of an Actor" ("Best Actor")"For the Totality of Merits" in the Moscow Art TheaterWon
MTV Russia Movie Awards[2]2008Best Comedy ActorThe Irony of Fate 2Won
VI International Festival named after People's Artist of the USSR Yuri Ozerov[2]Golden SwordThe AdmiralWon
Nika Award[57]Best Male ActorNominated
Golden Eagle[25]Won
MTV Russia Movie Awards[24]Won
Kinotavr[27]2013The Geographer Drank His Globe AwayWon
Golden Eagle Award[30]Won
Nika Award[29]Won
Russian Guild of Film Critics[28]Won
XXII Festival "Vivat, Cinema of Russia!"[2]Special Jury PrizeWon
The Stanislavsky Prize (theatrical season 2013–2014) at the XIX International Theater Festival "Stanislavsky Season" in Moscow[58]2014Special PrizeThe charity theater project "Generation of Mowgli" (MTS Company together with the Charitable Foundation of Konstantin Khabensky)Won
The "Impulse of Good" Award[59]2016Special Prize "for contribution to the development and promotion of social entrepreneurship in Russia"Won
GQ Russia[51]Actor of the YearWon
TEFI[34]Best Male ActorThe MethodWon
Golden Eagle AwardCollectorNominated
Kinotavr[36]Won
Prague Independent Film Festival[37]2017Won
Association of Film and Television Producers[41]2018Best Male ActorTrotskyWon
Prague Independent Film Festival[60]Special PrizeHonorary award for achievements in cinemaWon
Asian World Film Festival[61]Best New DirectorSobiborWon
Vienna Independent Film Festival[62]2019Best Male Supporting ActorDark like the Night. Karenina-2019Won

Filmography edit

Film edit

TitleYearRoleNotesRef.
To whom will God send1994pedestrian with glasses
Natasha1997Ferenc, a student
Khrustalyov, My Car!1997the conductor
The Admirer1999Stas
Women's Property1999Andrei Kalinin
House for the Rich2000Yuri Sapozhnikov
Mechanical Suite2001Edouard
The Tale of Fedot-Archer2001the peasant-accordionist
In Motion2002Sasha
Peculiarities of National Politics2003Gosha
Goddess: How I fell in Love2004Polosuev
Our Own2004Political Instructor Livshits
Night Watch2004Anton Gorodetsky
The State Counsellor2005Green
Poor Relatives2005Edik
Rush Hour2006Konstantin Arkhipov
Day Watch2006Anton Gorodetsky
The Russian Triangle2007Denis Maltsev
The Irony of Fate 22008Kostya Lukashin
Wanted2008The Exterminator
The Ghost2008Anton Prachenko
Admiral2008Admiral Alexander Kolchak
The Miracle2009Nikolay Artemyev
Fairytale.Is2011Encyclopedia
Raspoutine2011Aron Simanovic
Lucky Trouble2011Vyacheslav "Slava" Kolotilov
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy2011Polyakov
The Geographer Drank His Globe Away2013Viktor Sluzhkin, the geography teacher
World War Z2013Russian fighterCut from the final version
Black Sea2014Blackie
Unfriended2014OfficerUncredited
Yolki 19142014officer of the tsarist army
The Adventurers2014Max
Collector2016Arthur
The Good Boy2016Kolya's father
Fly Away Home2016Cohn
The Age of Pioneers2017Pavel Belyayev
Selfie2018Vladimir Bogdanov
Sobibor2018Alexander PecherskyAlso director and writer
Fairy2019Evgeniy Voygin
Fire2020Andrey Pavlovich Sokolov
Major Grom: Plague Doctor2021Dr Veniamin Rubinstein, psychiatrist
Normalny tolko ya2021Viktor Ryurikovich
Champion of the World2021Viktor Korchnoi
Grom: Boyhood2022Dr Veniamin Rubinstein, psychiatrist
The Righteous2023Avigdor
The Bremen Town Musicians2024the Detective
Guest from the Future2024Professor Seleznev
Major Grom: The Game2024Dr Veniamin Rubinstein, psychiatrist

Television edit

TitleYearRoleNetworkNotesRef.
National Security Agent2000RashidTNT2 episodes
Empire under Attack2000Grigory GershuniC1R6 episodes
Deadly Force2000-2005Igor PlakhovC1R6 seasons
Lines of Fate2003KostyaRTR24 episodes
The Case of "Dead Souls"2005ChichikovNTV8 episodes
Female Novel2005KirillC1R
Yesenin2005Leon TrotskyC1R5 episodes
The Fall of the Empire2005Boris LozovskyRTREpisode: "Japanese wood pigeon"
Filipp's Bay2006Filipp RoninRTR8 episodes
Heavenly Court2011, 2014AndreiSTB8 Episodes
The White Guard2012Dr. TurbinRTR12 Episodes
Pyotr Leschenko. Everything That Was...2013Pyotr LeshchenkoC1R8 Episodes
Evenings of Science with Konstantin Khabensky2014–presentHostDiscovery Channel
The Method2015–2021Rodion MeglinC1R32 episodes
Trotsky2017Leon TrotskyC1R8 episodes

Voice roles edit

Russian dubbing edit

Russian language films edit

Discography edit

Soundtracks edit

YearSongwithMovie
2007"Esli u vas netu tyoti"The Irony of Fate 2
2011"Prostitsa"Uma2rmanLucky Trouble
2013Pyotr Leschenko. Everything That Was...

Songs edit

YearSong
2012"Dom khrustalniy" (Vladimir Vysotsky)
2012"Moskva – Odesa" (Vladimir Vysotsky)

Theater work edit

Theater on the Kryukov Channel edit

Satyricon Theater edit

At the Satyricon Theater named after Arkady Raikin

Theater of Farce edit

Lensovet Theater edit

At the Lensovet Theater in St Petersburg:

Entreprise edit

Moscow Art Theater edit

At the Moscow Art Theater named after Anton Chekhov:

Musical Literary Projects edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 09.01.2012 г. № 33". Kremlin.
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  3. ^ a b c "Konstantin Khabensky bio". lifeactor.ru.
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  5. ^ a b Filipp Vuyachich (12 January 2017). ""Кинопоиск" назвал 10 самых популярных российских актёров XXI века". Life.
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  8. ^ a b c "Хабенский:в сынишке я вижу Настю!". Obozrevatel.
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  11. ^ "Константин ХАБЕНСКИЙ: ЧЕЛОВЕК ПРОЯВЛЯЕТСЯ НА ПЕРЕГРУЗКАХ". Novaya Gazeta.
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  22. ^ a b Marina Timasheva (20 January 2006). "Констатину Хабенскому присуждена кинопремия "Золотой Овен"". Радио Свобода. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
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  24. ^ a b ""Адмиралъ" стал триумфатором MTV Russia Movie Awards". Lenta.ru.
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  26. ^ Ronnie Scheib (November 2013). "Konstantin Khabensky gives a fascinating performance as an alcoholic loser in Alexander Veledinsky's oddly endearing third feature". Variety.
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  29. ^ a b "Лауреаты Национальной кинематографической премии "НИКА" за 2013 год". Nika Award.
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