Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi
Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi | |
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Directed by | Aleksandr Voytinskiy |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Anton Zenkovich |
Edited by |
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Music by | Dmitriy Selipanov |
Production companies | Angel - Film Company Perpetual Eight |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox CIS Renovatio Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 117 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Budget | $3 million 200 million RUB |
Box office | $2.632.583[1][2] |
Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi (Template:Lang-ru) is a 2016 Russian Christmas fantasy action film directed by Aleksandr Voytinskiy and produced by Georgiy Malkov, Vladimir Polyakov and Lev Karasev.[3] The film's protagonist is Masha, a girl who witnesses an epic battle of monsters with young magicians in the center of Moscow; one of the sorcerers saves the girl and leads her to a secret organization where she learns not only that Father Frost (Santa Claus) truly does exist, but also that the New Year is a real magical ritual. It stars Taisiya Vilkova, with Nikita Volkov, Fyodor Bondarchuk, Aleksei Kravchenko, Egor Beroev, Ksenia Alfyorova, Sergey Badyuk, Irina Antonenko, Igor Chekhov and Filipp Gorenshteyn in supporting roles.
The premiere of the film in Russia took place on 24 December 2016, and it later appeared in Russian screens on the eve of the New Year 2017.[4]
Plot
Young Masha is tormented by visions of flying fiery monsters. Mother worries about her daughter being bullied by classmates. But one day in the very center of Moscow Masha sees a battle of winged fire monsters with young people who call themselves magicians. One of them at the last moment, rescues Masha from the attack of a chimera. So Masha gets into a secret corporation, where she learns that Father Frost (Santa Claus) really exists and, leading an army of magicians able to control snow and ice, protects the Earth from the invasion of dark forces.[5]
Cast
- Taisiya Vilkova as Mariya "Masha" Petrova
- Marta Timofeeva as child Masha
- Nikita Volkov as Nikita Krutov
- Fyodor Bondarchuk as Miran Morozov, the Father Frost (Santa Claus)
- Aleksei Kravchenko as Karachun, the evil wizard
- Egor Beroev as Masha's father
- Ksenia Alfyorova as Masha's mother
- Sergey Badyuk as Dobrohot, the chief assistant of Santa Claus.
- Irina Antonenko as Lina
- Igor Chekhov as Ilya
- Filipp Gorenshteyn as Maks
- Vladimir Gostyukhin as Vitaliy Semenovich
- Svetlana Permyakova as Baba Lyuba
- Yan Tsapnik as participant of the auction
- Anastasiya Ukolova as Asya Raevskaya, Snegurochka (The Snow Maiden)
- Taras Glushakov as Stepan
- Maksim Pinsker as Santa Claus (II)
- Oleg Volku as Papay Noel
- Viktor Myutnikov as Daidi Na Nollaig
- Yevgeniy Saranchev as Ehee Dyshl
- Dmitriy Sitokhin as Khizir Ilyas
- Timur Koshelyov as Yolu Pukki
- Elina Sudyna as Irina Nikolaevna, music teacher
- Diana Pozharskaya as Elvira
- Peter Kovrizhnykh as Oleg Skvortsov
Production
Development
For two years of working on the script, the creators came up with and developed a mythology based on the rituals of celebrating the New Year in different periods of Russian history. More than 50 different costumes were made for the shooting of the film. For the main hero of Father Frost (Santa Claus) created 8 images, and for his antagonist Karachun - 3 images. Grimery spent several hours a day to create the most natural beards, mustaches and wigs for all the characters in the film.
Above creating a magical atmosphere in the film, a large creative team worked. Costume designers sewed more than 50 complex costumes: Father Frost (Santa Claus) had 8 costumes. Artists, make-up artists every day spent 2–3 hours to create the make-up of the villain Karachun and about 4 hours for all the brothers of Father Frost (Santa Claus). Artists and graphic designers have come up with and built real new worlds: the Santa Claus Corporation with secret rooms, the archive where all letters to Santa Claus are stored, training halls where young magicians perfect their skills; the headquarters of the brothers Morozov at the North Pole; The den of the villain Karachun. And they also created a lot of "magic" items and creatures: the sleigh and the staff of Santa Claus, the spheres - the weapon with which the magicians control the snow element, the Lunar sword Karachun wants to possess, fire chimeras, snow owls and much more. On the set every day there was a supervisor of computer graphics, and in almost 70% of the scenes stuntmen participated.
Filming
The Location filming took place from December last year on the streets of New Year's Moscow, all the main and large-scale events of the tape unfolded in places not only iconic for the New Year, but also truly supporting the magic atmosphere with their festive decoration and illumination - the Central Children's Store on Lubyanka, Red Square, Tsaritsyno Palace, Patriarch Ponds and Tverskaya Street.
Release
Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi was released in the Russian Federation on 24 December 2016 by 20th Century Fox CIS.
Critical response
The film received mostly negative reviews in Russian media. He received only one positive review from the newspaper "Izvestia", which he called "quality family fantasy".[6] All other reviews were neutral or negative.[7] They wrote about the film: The scenario, suffering from all existing mental disorders, was wiped out by a sick fantasy, "Rossiyskaya Gazeta",[8] It is possible to analyze the absurdities of the film indefinitely,[9] The film leaves a sense of confusion.[10]
References
- ^ "ДЕД МОРОЗ. БИТВА МАГОВ". KinoBusiness (in Russian).
- ^ "Ded Moroz. Bitva Magov / Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi (2016)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb.
- ^ "Дед Мороз. Битва магов". VokrugTV (in Russian).
- ^ "Федор Бондарчук перевоплотился в Деда Мороза" [Fyodor Bondarchuk reincarnated as Santa Claus]. Woman.ru (in Russian). 20 October 2016.
- ^ "Дед Мороз: Битва Магов / Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi (2016)". Kinoafisha.info (in Russian).
- ^ Labutina, Darya (23 December 2016). "Дед Мороз против фантастических тварей" [Santa Claus is against fantastic creatures]. Izvestia (in Russian).
- ^ "Дед Мороз. Битва магов" (in Russian). Kritikanstvo.ru.
- ^ Litovchenko, Aleksey (23 December 2016). "Дед Мороз. Битва магов": мозговзрывающая умалишенная фэнтези-феерия — Российская газета" [Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi: a brain-exploding insane fantasy extravaganza - Rossiyskaya Gazeta]. Rossiyskaya Gazeta (in Russian).
- ^ Ivanov, Boris (21 December 2016). "Дед Мороз. Битва Магов" [Santa Claus. Battle of the Magi]. Film.ru (in Russian).
- ^ Yegorova, Lyubov (21 December 2016). "В людях и в кино нужно искать хорошее" [In people and in the cinema you need to look for good]. Metro News Russia (in Russian).
External links
- 2016 films
- 2010s Russian-language films
- 2010s Christmas films
- 2010s fantasy action films
- 2010s fantasy adventure films
- 2010s action adventure films
- Russian Christmas films
- Christmas adventure films
- Santa Claus in film
- Russian fantasy action films
- Russian fantasy adventure films
- Russian action adventure films
- Russian teen films
- Teen adventure films
- 2010s children's fantasy films
- Russian children's fantasy films
- High fantasy films
- Magic realism films
- 2010s teen fantasy films
- Films set around New Year
- Films set in Moscow
- Films set in Russia
- Films directed by Aleksandr Voytinskiy