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Imagine finding a member of the Windsor family hidden away organic gardening on a mountainside in rural Alaska. You’d have questions. This is how director Dmitry Vasyukov found the narrative of his next story in gleaning through pictures, interviews and documents the story of the famous princely Golitsyn family, a once prolific and influential family of Russian nobility that fled the Bolsheviks. What followed over the next four generations was an over a hundred year saga escaping revolution, wars, economic hardship and domestic violence. It is not because of, but despite these experiences, that drive the family members to hold on to their culture and family story. This is a story about family. It is a story about grace, strength and survival. It is the story about how, no matter where we find ourselves, we can build and rebuild a home by holding on to each other.
The story opens with the matriarch of the family, 94-year-old Princess Praskovya. A formidable woman who uses her wit, humor, and sharp mind to keep the memories of the past alive, Princess Praskovya holds the narrative of the whole film. Her memoirs are illustrated with the help of a huge family video and photo archive that traveled with the family. Echoing these historical memoirs is her grandson, Michael, who travels through France as he seeks out the origins of these stories for a book he is writing about his family.
In Normandy, France, he finds the house where his grandmother spent her childhood. In Paris he finds an apartment where, after WWII, his relatives hid a former prisoner, a Soviet officer. Together with Michael we learn about the love story of his grandmother and grandfather – a princess and a homeless child turned petty thief. Their marriage and escape from the KGB in France led them to a quiet life in New England where they raised their daughters, Katherine and Anastasia.
Against the backdrop of this love story, is the love story between Michael's parents, Katherine and Jack. In the early years of her marriage and as a young mother she finds herself a victim of an unhappy marriage. In an act of self preservation she is forced, with her family, to hide from her husband and the authorities for many years, living under false names, and fleeing to remote Alaska. Unable to get jobs, they choose to subsist off the land in a remote cabin without running water or electricity. Faced with brutal winters and hard physical labor, they use the landscape to live from: hunting and fishing, foraging and gardening for over a decade. Despite this, the family thrives by once again carrying home within themselves.
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Dmitry VasyukovDirector
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Aleksey PoyarkovWriter
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Andrey NovickyProducer
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Ekaterina Lanskaya SapozhnikovaProducer
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Project Type:Documentary
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Genres:history, portrait
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Runtime:2 hours 30 minutes
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Completion Date:March 1, 2022
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Production Budget:500,000 USD
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Country of Origin:Israel
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Country of Filming:United States
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Language:Russian
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Shooting Format:Digital
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Aspect Ratio:16:9
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
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ARTDOCFESTRiga
Latvia
October 5, 2022
Dmitry Vasyukov, russian filmmaker and director focuses his storymaking on sweeping, reflective film making intertwining walden-like landscapes and normal livelihoods with a commanding narrative. Vasyukov’s films focus on strong, self-sufficient people. By relying on their skills and connection to the land, they find happiness. Through his films, he inspires people to believe in themselves and through that belief endure more than they ever thought was possible.
Notable Works:
In late 1990s Vasyukov created, directed and hosted TV show “Dialogues about Fishing” that was broadcasted at Russian Main Federal Channel “Russia” for five years.
In 2003 he conceived the TV documentary “Happy People” describing the year cycle in Bakhta village located in taiga on the Siberian river Yenissei. By 2007 four 52-minute parts were completed winning the Award at Russian IFF for documentary films “ArtDocFest” and also the prestigious TV Nomination “Laurel branch”. Russian biggest TV Channel, ‘The First’, acquired rights for broadcasting the series.
In 2010 the renowned German producer and director Werner Herzog got involved in this project to release a 90-minute international version of the series titled “Happy People. A Year in the Taiga”.
This version was nominated at IFF in the USA, Italy, Japan and in other countries. In 2012 the film was released in cinemas across Europe, and in 2013 in the USA. In 2013 Discovery Channel purchased the rights.
In 2013 “Happy People” project continued with a 2-series documentary “Pomory” produced with the help of Russian Geographical Society. Russian Channel ‘The First’ purchased rights.
In 2014 Vasyukov used crowdfunding for the third film of the project, “Altai”, which was first released as a 4-series documentary and later developed into a cinema version titled “Another Life”.
E-mail: dvasukov@gmail.com
I have always been fascinated with the dichotomy present in rural life - the freedom found not despite, but because of, the rigors found in a subsistence lifestyle. My ground breaking documentary Happy People - A year in the Taiga - led me to Alaska. There I met a princess of Russia, and three generations of her family who had spent their lives fleeing authorities across the globe. In their history, despite tragedy and loss, I found the core of the stories that inspire me most - the fleeting, elusive things we yearn for but cannot always describe. It could be freedom, simplicity, or love. But here, ultimately, it was home.