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IMDbPro

La petite Véra

Titre original : Malenkaya Vera
  • 1988
  • Unrated
  • 2h 8min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
2,3 k
MA NOTE
La petite Véra (1988)
DrameRomance

Les frasques de Vera qui habite dans une petite ville industrielle. Vera a quitté l'école jeune et fait les 400 coups, suivant ses désirs afin d'oublier les disputes familiales, son père alc... Tout lireLes frasques de Vera qui habite dans une petite ville industrielle. Vera a quitté l'école jeune et fait les 400 coups, suivant ses désirs afin d'oublier les disputes familiales, son père alcoolique et le sombre avenir qui l'attend.Les frasques de Vera qui habite dans une petite ville industrielle. Vera a quitté l'école jeune et fait les 400 coups, suivant ses désirs afin d'oublier les disputes familiales, son père alcoolique et le sombre avenir qui l'attend.

  • Réalisation
    • Vasili Pichul
  • Scénario
    • Mariya Khmelik
    • Igor Shaferan
  • Casting principal
    • Natalya Negoda
    • Andrey Sokolov
    • Yuriy Nazarov
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    2,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Vasili Pichul
    • Scénario
      • Mariya Khmelik
      • Igor Shaferan
    • Casting principal
      • Natalya Negoda
      • Andrey Sokolov
      • Yuriy Nazarov
    • 18avis d'utilisateurs
    • 10avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 7 victoires et 9 nominations au total

    Photos115

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 109
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    Rôles principaux24

    Modifier
    Natalya Negoda
    Natalya Negoda
    • Vera
    Andrey Sokolov
    Andrey Sokolov
    • Sergey Sokolov
    Yuriy Nazarov
    Yuriy Nazarov
    • Nikolay - otets Very
    Lyudmila Zaytseva
    Lyudmila Zaytseva
    • Rita - mama Very
    Aleksandr Negreba
    Aleksandr Negreba
    • Viktor - brat Very
    • (as Alexander Alexseyev Negreba)
    Aleksandra Tabakova
    Aleksandra Tabakova
    • Lenka Chistyakova
    • (as Alexandra Tabakova)
    Andrey Fomin
    • Andryusha
    Aleksandr Mironov
    Aleksandr Mironov
    • Tolik
    Aleksandr Lenkov
    Aleksandr Lenkov
    • Mikhail Petrovich
    A. Vasilyev
    Gennady Goryachev
    • Sledovatel
    • (as G. Goryachev)
    Vadim Zakharchenko
    Vadim Zakharchenko
    • Muzhchina v bolnichnoy palate
    • (as V. Zakharchenko)
    Elena Maryutina
    • Sledovatel
    Tatyana Mitrushina
    Tatyana Mitrushina
    • mama Andryushi
    Elena Fishkina
    Mariya Khmelik
    Mariya Khmelik
    • podruga Viktora
    • (as M. Khmelik)
    Natasha Smeyan
    • dochka Mikhaila Petrovicha
    Maksim Nayrabe
    • brat Lenki Chistyakovoy
    • (as Maxim Nairabe)
    • Réalisation
      • Vasili Pichul
    • Scénario
      • Mariya Khmelik
      • Igor Shaferan
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs18

    6,92.2K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    8kittinjc

    A shocking film painted in shades of decay and rust

    Little Vera is the story of a Russian teenager, her family, and her attempts to find meaning and value in a life sliding increasingly into decay. In her search for meaning, she falls in love with a more intellectual and rebellious Sergei, whose hatred for her deeply flawed parents quickly spirals out of control.

    Little Vera is shocking and disturbing in nearly every way. The drinking of the father, the enabling and lack of understanding of the mother, the casual lies and misdirection of the brother, and Vera herself forgiving them all their flaws are all shocking and slightly disturbing to watch. However, the raw honesty of the film somehow manages to become even more shocking than the plot or characters. Set in cramped spaces and vast urban decay, Little Vera presented a vastly different view of Soviet life than had ever been seen before. In fact, Little Vera is a portrait of the collapse of Soviet society painted in shades of pain, desperation, and rust. It is the implosion of a family set against the implosion of an entire social order.

    Although painful and desperately unsatisfying, the film itself is definitely worth seeing, if only to understand the feelings and cultures still reshaping Russia today.
    9pelotard

    The Real Deal

    Forget every spy movie you've ever seen - this is what life was like in the USSR, and still is in many places in Russia and the ex-Soviet countries. Vera dreams of life of leisure, as she imagines the West to be; her reality is very different, with a bitter mother, a violent father, and the ever-present alcohol. And her prospects for the future are not much better. She finds a man and they try to patch up a life together, but he is afflicted by the same environment, both socially and physically - the scenery in this movie is brilliant, sitting comfortably in the company of post-apocalyptic movies but obviously done with no special effects; they have just walked in and shot whatever happened to be in front of the camera.

    Forget your stereotyped, cold Russians of spy movies. This is the Real Deal: people are passionate, vibrant, and present in a way you'll never see in a drama from the West.
    ngriffi

    worth watching once

    What I found so interesting about this film was the incredible contrast of subject matter and mood between this film and the Russian films that came before it.

    A product of Glasnost, in an attempt to modernize the cinema and remove censorship, allowed for Russians to be shown realistically and their individual stories be told instead of a happy Russian body of agreeable people.

    The film addresses the reality of dysfunctional families, crammed into small apartments, alcoholism, poverty, and young adults confused and rebelling against authority.

    Little Vera depicts Vera and her family with attitudes of hopelessness, apathy and loneliness.

    I liked the movie for the fact that it is ground breaking – showing problematic issues and stories of individuals that were never or could never be shown on screen previously under oppressive governments.

    I personally wouldn't watch it again. Its worth watching once! Once was enough for me because I hated all the characters and was left depressed after watching a movie where people are constantly fighting –but that- I think is the point of the film.
    10inthemiks

    Final years of the Soviet Union.

    It's alarming, to say the least, how little the English speaking world knows about Russia's past. Everyone keeps saying Russia, but I grew up in the Soviet Union, and I can't really call it an exclusively Russian film like everyone else. Ironically, this movie was filmed in Zhdanov(Mariupol), which is now a part of Ukriane. The director chose this city because that's where he was from and he wanted to show the reality of life there. This city always been a ghetto. Now it's even worse, since that part of Ukraine is engulfed in a civil war. So the hopeless openededness of this film was right on point. Unfortunately, I have a feeling the main character would most likely die sometime in the 90's to early 2000's. Even moving wouldn't help, cause the whole area of the former Soviet Union later became a total cesspool of violent crime and drug/alcohol addiction.

    During the late 80's, right before the Soviet Union collapsed, there was a plethora of similar films, but for some weird reason only this one was known outside of the country. There were films with worse sex scenes before and after this one, and unlike many other countries, there was no censorship, so TV was full of nudity at the time. So I am really confused why this was praised for a "sex scene", or "rock n' roll"(?!). This film is none of that. This era of Soviet film was actually called "Chernuha" which translates as darkness, despair, gritty. Films during this time were full of realism, had this art-house vibe and yet very genuine acting, and always had a somewhat hidden psychological or philosophical dilemma in it. Sounds like Oscar's winner Moonlight. Indeed, if Moonlight took place in the 80's Soviet Union, and instead of drugs people were drinking, it would fit right in. Some scenes are almost identical with those Soviet films. (i.e. filming a pot on a stove for a good 1 minute or so, or a character is staring at something or thinking for a long time.) I actually seen a lot of them when I was a kid, but it took me decades to watch most of them again. Many never been preserved and therefore are in a very bad shape and some I still can't find, so they were pretty much lost during the switch to the digital format. During the 90's, Russian society rejected everything from the Soviet era. Even this film would have probably been lost if it wasn't for this unusual international hype about it because of some naive sex scene.

    There are some odd moments in the film that I only noticed when I watched it as an adult. There is really good and rare collector's items Italo-Disco(CC Catch) blasting from TV during the house party. A phenomena of an underground music style in North America that was only played at gay clubs, was actually a mainstream thing in the Soviet Union. Then there is a clear pedophile situation at a cafe between a man and a very young girl. Another strange scene is where Vera gets accidentally hit by a pot in the head by her drunk girlfriend with a black kid. It was also sort of disturbing to see how she was calling him names and screaming at him when she was drunk, which followed by a scene where he was alone watching a silly cartoon on TV about staying away from Africa because it has dangerous animals, while it's very obvious that life for this kid with black skin in that hell hole of a town is probably worse than being in an African jungle...

    The film is as real as it gets. The life was like this for most of the Soviet Union back then. So I definitely would recommend it as a learning artifact. Also Vera means hope. So the name of the film in Russian means also "A very little hope".
    5mjneu59

    rebel without a manifesto

    This once notorious drama (at least in its own country) was hailed as a breakthrough when first released simply for daring to show modern Soviet life without the usual State-approved propaganda halo, in all its actual anti-bureaucratic grubbiness. But watching the film on this side of the erstwhile Iron Curtain only reinforces the notion that Soviet youth culture is thirty years behind the rest of the world: despite the often oppressive details it might be just another quaint teen delinquency relic from early 1960s Hollywood, dubbed into Russian and updated with casual sex and drug abuse. In other words, it's hardly a revelation to discover that Russian kids are just as misunderstood by adults as their American role models. But while the attitudes may look dated to Western audiences, it's at least an honest attempt to portray something of the boredom and defiant posturing of youth, in a country not exactly noted for addressing its generation gap.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This was the first Soviet film to depict graphic sexual intercourse on screen.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: See You in the Morning/Disorganized Crime/Speed Zone/Checking Out/Little Vera (1989)
    • Bandes originales
      Heaven And Hell
      (uncredited)

      Written by Dieter Bohlen

      Performed by C.C. Catch

      Produced by Dieter Bohlen

      [plays during playback of the video clip of the same name C. C. Catch]

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Little Vera?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 juin 1989 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Union soviétique
    • Langue
      • Russe
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Little Vera
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Zhdanov, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Mariupol, Ukraine]
    • Société de production
      • Kinostudiya imeni M. Gorkogo
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 1 262 598 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 23 950 $US
      • 16 avr. 1989
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 1 262 598 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 8min(128 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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