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Moscou ne croit pas aux larmes

Original title: Moskva slezam ne verit
  • 1980
  • PG
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Vera Alentova and Aleksey Batalov in Moscou ne croit pas aux larmes (1980)
ComedyDramaRomance

Three young provincial women come to Moscow in search of what people in all the capitals of the world are looking for - love, happiness and prosperity. Their destinies develop exactly as the... Read allThree young provincial women come to Moscow in search of what people in all the capitals of the world are looking for - love, happiness and prosperity. Their destinies develop exactly as the character of each of the girls suggests.Three young provincial women come to Moscow in search of what people in all the capitals of the world are looking for - love, happiness and prosperity. Their destinies develop exactly as the character of each of the girls suggests.

  • Director
    • Vladimir Menshov
  • Writers
    • Valentin Chernykh
    • Vladimir Menshov
  • Stars
    • Vera Alentova
    • Aleksey Batalov
    • Irina Muravyova
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vladimir Menshov
    • Writers
      • Valentin Chernykh
      • Vladimir Menshov
    • Stars
      • Vera Alentova
      • Aleksey Batalov
      • Irina Muravyova
    • 53User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

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    Photos63

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    Top cast79

    Edit
    Vera Alentova
    Vera Alentova
    • Katerina 'Katya' Tikhomirova
    Aleksey Batalov
    Aleksey Batalov
    • Georgiy 'Gosha'
    Irina Muravyova
    Irina Muravyova
    • Lyudmila Sviridova
    Aleksandr Fatyushin
    Aleksandr Fatyushin
    • Sergey 'Seryozha' Gurin
    Raisa Ryazanova
    Raisa Ryazanova
    • Antonina Buyanova
    Boris Smorchkov
    Boris Smorchkov
    • Nikolay
    Yuriy Vasilev
    Yuriy Vasilev
    • Rodion 'Rudolph' Rachkov
    Natalya Vavilova
    Natalya Vavilova
    • Aleksandra - Katerina's Daughter
    Oleg Tabakov
    Oleg Tabakov
    • Volodya
    Yevgeniya Khanayeva
    Yevgeniya Khanayeva
    • Rachkov's Mother
    Valentina Ushakova
    Valentina Ushakova
    • Nikolay's mother, Anna Nikitichna
    Viktor Uralskiy
    Viktor Uralskiy
    • Nikolay's father, Mikhail Ivanovich
    Zoya Fyodorova
    Zoya Fyodorova
    • Aunt Pasha
    Liya Akhedzhakova
    Liya Akhedzhakova
    • Club director Olga Pavlovna
    Tatyana Konyukhova
    Tatyana Konyukhova
    • Self
    Vladlen Paulus
    Vladlen Paulus
    • Pyotr Lednev
    • (as V. Paulus)
    Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
    Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
    • Self
    Georgiy Yumatov
    Georgiy Yumatov
    • Self
    • Director
      • Vladimir Menshov
    • Writers
      • Valentin Chernykh
      • Vladimir Menshov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    8.015K
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    Featured reviews

    7toqtaqiya2

    A film about three women out for love.

    Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears is an appealing comedy-drama with much to say about Soviet society from the 1950s to the 1970s. The cast deliver standout performances, and this is the film's greatest strength. The story is about their lives. The city's scenery is often featured, with cinematography that's good for a Soviet drama film. The score, however, is standard fare, but there are a few notable songs. Considering its high entertainment value it's no wonder that Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears became one of the most popular films in the Soviet Union. It even won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1980. It's just one of those films where everyone involved in making it contributed to a result that delivers on all fronts. If the acting or the direction was worse then the result could have been another forgettable drama. Soviet filmmakers, however, specialized in drama films. This is because of the restrictions that were put on them by the government. Many good dramas were released during the Soviet period, and Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears is one of the most memorable. I definitely recommend seeing it.
    Verbatima

    Good beginning, disintegrates into stereotypes

    This film makes one wonder what exactly the heroine worked so hard for. A young girl from a small town comes to Moscow and becomes pregnant. Her lover repudiates her, the lover's mother humiliates her, telling her that she is not a good fit for her big-city dandy son. Rather than leave Moscow and go back to her parents, or try to perform an abortion on herself, the heroine has the baby. She works hard at the factory, getting up at 5 AM every morning, passes grueling entrance exams into college, becomes an engineer -- all while raising her little girl as a single parent and an unwed mother. Bold subject matter for a Soviet movie made in the seventies.

    Then -- a compromise: the heroine who, sixteen years after her ordeal, has a good life, a good home, and a prestigious managerial job, falls head over heals for a man who treats her like dirt.

    "Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears" was made almost at the same time as the equally celebrated "Workplace Romance" ("Sluzhebnyj Roman"), and they are, in a sense, competitors. Both movies are about single women in their mid- to late thirties who made a brilliant career but were never married. Both heroines are presented as strong-willed, independent individuals in managerial positions, whose lives are nevertheless missing something. But if "Sluzhebnyj Roman" says that life is incomplete without love, "Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears" says that life is incomplete without a man.

    Women of the older generation are all in love with "Moscow"'s main male character -- the heroine's ultimate husband. I cannot fathom why -- the actor's cute, but his character is unnerving. One does not need to be a feminist to have a strong urge to throw this man down the stairs. He stifles every impulse of individuality in her; he presumes to know what she wants, what's proper for her and what's not; he patronizes her; he pushes her around. On the train, he begins their acquaintance by commenting: "You have the eyes of a woman who is not married." (What kind of eyes are those?) I cannot see why one would find any charm in such familiarity and cocky self-assurance from a stranger.

    It's worth noting that the corresponding character in "Sluzhenyj Roman" -- an excessively mild-mannered, shy man -- learns to stand up to the bossy heroine, but does so without disrespecting her. The character in "Moscow", on the contrary, puts the heroine in her proper place -- which is to be quiet and follow orders.

    I think that a Western critic would perceive the ending of "Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears" as ironic and sad. The heroine, a woman who spent her life making something of herself by overcoming seemingly insurmountable obstacles, is last shown fussing around her kitchen for the benefit of a man who was not with her on that long journey, who dares to raise his voice at her in her own home, while eating her food, and who acts as if his very physical presence at the table confers a rare privilege on a woman whose clock is ticking.
    kurtrus

    Small Theme with a Big Heart

    Culturally interesting since this occurs in a Communist country that US propaganda gave little insight on the values and realities of the people. We see idealistic poets who say the older generation made mistakes, women promoted to executive positions, a film produced by the State yet approaching sexual themes, Western idolization, the drudgery of repetitive industrial work, and class distinctions between the haves and have-nots.

    Also of interest is the protagonist's view of herself. Without revealing plot twists, it is suffice to say that a woman is socially seen as submissive to the man. This is a shock to Western sensibilities of women's equality, especially as we see her ordeals as a result of a man's selfishness and dominance. What is revealing is that she, herself does not rebel against the System. She works within the parameters, creates her own success, and becomes transformed.

    Being Western, I found myself questioning whether she had truly achieved something. The crown of achievement, we are taught, is independence, equality. Whereas she achieved that in a career and in her lifestyle, in her heart, she yearned for a man, to be the little wife, and to submit herself to a patriarchal marriage. But, in the end, who are we to judge another's happiness?
    9sym4ny

    a nice movie. Splendid, in one word

    This is a tribute to the Soviet era some people in Ukraine still consider to be the best years of their lives.I saw the movie in my child years, but didn't pay much attention to it. Now, when I study film history and techniques, the movie revealed to me some dark sides. "Moskva sliezam nie verit", I guess, tells a story of a humble Soviet woman in pursuit for happiness with a beloved man. This woman does not care about feminism. True love of a man-"stronghold", a man who is ready to comfort her any time she needs--that is what she is searching for in life. The movie shows some cloudy moments in the way to happiness three female friends go along. And the movie ends up where it should--an "island of placid" I watch it in original. Have to say, many phrases from the movie are cited in Ukrainian and Russian-speaking communities these days.
    10wvisser-leusden

    too much quality to sum up

    Vladimir Menshov's well-balanced 'Moscow does not believe in tears' provides a moving story about human warmth. About fortunes and misfortunes that can befell anyone of us -- enabling us to identify easily.

    This film also is about a very East European female eagerness to hunt after Mr. Right. Pressure is on, for in Communist society failure usually meant a lifelong condemnation to a poor, worried, boring and tiring life in some drab Russian provincial town. With a big possibility that your husband would booze himself up too much.

    No doubt this film's acting makes its strongest feature. Its uninterrupted, breathtaking quality convincingly carries you back some fifty years in time. To Moscow, the capital of the USSR. Although this Communist society has been gone for a long time, 'Moscow does not believe in tears' will easily get you back there.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      One of four Russian films ever to win Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The other are Guerre et paix (1965), Dersou Ouzala (1975) and Soleil trompeur (1994).
    • Goofs
      When Lyudmila and her friend approach the office building she is wearing a pair of white shoes. Once inside the building the shoes color changes to black.
    • Quotes

      Lyudmila Gurina: Don't cry.

      Lyudmila Gurina: You know what Moscow thinks of tears.

      Lyudmila Gurina: We shouldn't be sitting around, we should do something.

    • Connections
      Featured in Lyubov i golubi (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      Aleksandra, Aleksandra
      Written by Sergey Nikitin and Dmitry Suharev and Yuri Vizbor

      Performed by Tatyana Nikitina and Sergey Nikitin

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 14, 1982 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Official site
      • Mosfilm [rus]
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears
    • Filming locations
      • Moscow, Russia
    • Production companies
      • Mosfilm
      • Vtoroe Tvorcheskoe Obedinenie
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $900,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $217
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 10 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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