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IMDbPro

Sobachye serdtse

  • TV Movie
  • 1988
  • PG
  • 2h 16m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
9.9K
YOUR RATING
Sobachye serdtse (1988)
FarcePeriod DramaSatireComedyDramaSci-Fi

In the wake of the Russian revolution, Professor Preobrazhensky rescues a starving dog from the gutter, and attempts to transform him into a man. Based on Mikhail Bulgakov's novel of the sam... Read allIn the wake of the Russian revolution, Professor Preobrazhensky rescues a starving dog from the gutter, and attempts to transform him into a man. Based on Mikhail Bulgakov's novel of the same name.In the wake of the Russian revolution, Professor Preobrazhensky rescues a starving dog from the gutter, and attempts to transform him into a man. Based on Mikhail Bulgakov's novel of the same name.

  • Director
    • Vladimir Bortko
  • Writers
    • Nataliya Bortko
    • Mikhail A. Bulgakov
  • Stars
    • Evgeniy Evstigneev
    • Vladimir Tolokonnikov
    • Boris Plotnikov
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.5/10
    9.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vladimir Bortko
    • Writers
      • Nataliya Bortko
      • Mikhail A. Bulgakov
    • Stars
      • Evgeniy Evstigneev
      • Vladimir Tolokonnikov
      • Boris Plotnikov
    • 19User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos30

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    Top cast43

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    Evgeniy Evstigneev
    Evgeniy Evstigneev
    • Professor Filipp Filippovich Preobrazhensky
    Vladimir Tolokonnikov
    Vladimir Tolokonnikov
    • Poligraf Poligrafovich Sharikov
    Boris Plotnikov
    Boris Plotnikov
    • Dr. Bormenthal
    Roman Kartsev
    Roman Kartsev
    • Shwonder
    Nina Ruslanova
    Nina Ruslanova
    • Darya Petrovna Ivanova
    Evgeniy Kuznetsov
    • Pestrukhin
    Olga Melikhova
    Olga Melikhova
    • Zinochka Bunina
    Aleksey Mironov
    Aleksey Mironov
    • Fyodor
    Anzhelika Nevolina
    Anzhelika Nevolina
    • Vasnetsova
    Natalya Fomenko
    • Vyazemskaya
    Ivan Ganzha
    • Zharovkin
    Valentina Kovel
    Valentina Kovel
    • The Patient
    Sergey Filippov
    Sergey Filippov
    • The Patient
    Roman Tkachuk
    Roman Tkachuk
    • Nikolay Persikov
    Natalya Lapina
    Natalya Lapina
    • Spiritualist Session Participant
    Sergey Bekhterev
    Sergey Bekhterev
    • The Medium
    Aleksandr Belinsky
    • Spiritualist Session Participant
    Igor Efimov
    Igor Efimov
    • The Investigator
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Vladimir Bortko
    • Writers
      • Nataliya Bortko
      • Mikhail A. Bulgakov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    8.59.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    David-353

    hilarious, smart, sharp

    One of the best screen versions of a great book I've ever seen. The acting is superb! The film is full of bitter satire on the first years of the communist regime and shows its stupidity and utter cruelty. I hardly believed that Bulgakov could be put on the screen with such a delicacy as to preserve the subtle hints and political/satiric subtext that characterizes many of the cultural masterpieces of the communist era. The casting is fantastic and every actor is irreplaceable. The film has reached the status of a cult movie very quickly and many phrases from it have become a part of the modern Russian language. A must see!
    10michaelberanek275

    Big-hearted film about dogs and men in the great Soviet experiment

    Superb modern parable from a seditious Russian novel of 1925 by Mikhail Bulgakov that didn't see the light of day until the 1980s. This is cleverly photographed in sepia hues alongside some brilliantly restored and copied archive-footage, but at the same time it feels very contemporary and accessible with great definition close up, haunting polyphonic choral music, excellent comic acting, so it's got pretty much everything right. The Amazon sleeve art was a little off-putting looking rather cheap and amateur which it is neither - quite the opposite - it's clearly lavishly produced, ironically by Leninfilm. Ask anyone in eastern Europe, they've seen this film, but may not have heard of the book of its long history.

    The story is a biting satire of Soviet communism and even when it was released it would have packed a punch, in fact it was surely art like this and other cultural dissent, not Ronald Reagan and Gorby that dismissed the regime, just a year later.

    The plot involves a slightly uncouth mongrel dog but ever so charming that undergoes an experiment that the Bolshevik-hating professor didn't bargain for.... There's a touch of horror, layer upon layer of contemporaneous & still relevant cultural/political references, but above all it takes the prize for being all this but still extremely funny, and warm and humane. A cracker.
    10proterozoic

    Wow

    This movie (and yes, it's a movie - it was shot as a two-parter, but the two parts together come down to slightly more than 2 hours) is one of the unsung masterpieces of world cinema. A very well-mannered, and yet at the same time absolutely savage denunciation of the Soviet regime and the type of person who flourished under it, the film is a faithful adaptation of the long-banned eponymous book by Mikhail Bulgakov. The sets are flawless, and the director made the brilliant decision to film in monochrome sepia, adding a feel of authenticity where a late-80s washed-out color incarnation would have all but ruined the film. I won't say much about the plot, which deserves to be discovered by the viewer himself, but the performances are true Oscar material; special mentions go out to E. Evstigneev, who plays the old professor with such presence, gravitas and kind wisdom that with barely a word or a gesture, he ends up stealing every scene he's in. The second, of course, is Creature/Sharikov, who, played to horrifying perfection by V. Tolokonnikov, is by far more frightening a character than Hannibal Lecter, because not only does he exist in real life - entire countries have been ran by men like him throughout history, with all that ensues.

    While it's a socio political allegory, it is worth mentioning that the movie is also brimming with humor, albeit dark - there are many outright comedies which haven't made me laugh as much as this film. What's more, when laughing at this movie, the feeling is not only one of hilarity but of understanding and agreement, which is always a plus.

    There is hardly a complaint I have with this movie - the only slight flaw is the tone of intellectual/bourgeois snobbery I caught at times from the "enlightened" characters. But that's a minor quibble.

    Sadly, this film appears to have been bypassed by Western licensing companies. It's a crying shame that one of the all-round best movies out there is languishing unrestored and untranslated (which shouldn't be incredibly hard - though all the cultural references and the revolutionary terminology will necessarily fade in translation, the film's main themes should be accessible to all). While we're waiting with our fingers crossed for the Criterion edition, I'm considering creating English subtitles myself. Will see how that works out.
    9AndalouRainDog

    I watched this movie at least 20 times...

    ...Not always from the beginning, though, but every time it goes on TV I am somehow unable to switch channel - dispite knowing all of the scenes by heart! Almost perfect adaptation of a great Bulgakov's novella. I recommend "Heart of a Dog" to every foreign viewer as a hidden gem of soviet cinema.
    10Oleg Sidorenko

    Great food for thought. Still tasty:)

    Having first watched the movie at 14, I remember being struck by hearing the word 'govno' (sh*t) for the first time ever on the then-still-Soviet TV (I bet it really was *the* first time in history — anyone wants to add this to trivia section?:)... What an open boldness and freedom, I thought! As years passed, I was more and more impressed with the movie and the incredible acting, but my feelings turned to a kind of mixture of enjoyment from a genuine piece of cinematographic art and a bitter realization of a concept diametrically opposite to my 14-y.o. impression: helplessness. There's an air of inevitable catastrophe looming throughout the movie, of primitive degenerate tide (embodied by Sharikov) sweeping the lives of the finest minds advancing humanity in their areas... It's a great metaphor of Russian revolution in general, inspired by intellectuals ashamed of their superiority and hoping to 'upgrade' the lower classes, only to unleash the power of mediocrity and get swallowed by it... An extremely fine and talented piece, wrapping a truly sad idea in a brilliantly satiric and elegant form. Symbolically enough, the movie itself marked the end of the Soviet movie traditions era before the Hollywood tsunami had knocked them over — for good, it seems, judging by most current Russian movies (most of them labeled 'blockbusters' in prerelease!!! trailers and posters:).

    Funnily, that 'govno' episode is in no contradiction to Efenstor's comment above re rude language of current generation... From what I've already said it could seem that this might be the movie that showed the way for this, but it was not. A mild word by current standards, it was way too rude back then, and just rude enough to show the true nature of all Sharikovs... BTW, re Efenstor's lament, it is sooo naive to juxtapose being intellectual and using rude lexicon, especially for Russian speakers, where a single cussword could have meanings that take sentences in translation! But I join in regret that ALL the meaning in today's teenager's talk may be expressed by cusswords. I feel that this is the bigger problem than their choice of the medium that's most efficient for the task:) Well, this movie and the book are great food for thought that might change them, or anyone who might have a luxury of watching it.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A dog named Karai was filmed in the role of Sharik. The owner and trainer of the dog is Yelena Nikiforova. The dog was in the service of the police and by the beginning of filming, the heroic mongrel had 38 arrests on its account. After "Heart of a Dog" Karay starred in four more films.
    • Quotes

      Poligraf Poligrafovich Sharikov: You are wrong here. I didn't ask you to perform the operation, did I? A fine business! You go and grab hold of an animal, slice his head open... and now you're sick of him! I didn't give permission to operate on me, did I? Neither did my relatives. I guess I have the right to sue you.

      Professor Filipp Filippovich Preobrazhensky: So you object to having been turned into a human being, do you? Maybe you'd prefer to be sniffing around garbage cans again? Or freezing under gateways?

      Poligraf Poligrafovich Sharikov: Why do you keep on at me? Garbage cans, garbage cans! Perhaps I was making my living there. And what if I'd died under your knife? What d'you say to that, comrade?

      Professor Filipp Filippovich Preobrazhensky: My name is Philip Philipovich. I'm no comrade of yours!

      Poligraf Poligrafovich Sharikov: Oh sure, I know. Of course, how else, we're not your comrades! How could we? We understand, sir! We didn't go to universities. We never had a flat of fifteen rooms and a bathroom. Only now it is time to forget about all that.

    • Connections
      Featured in Legendy mirovogo kino: Evgeny Evstigneyev

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 20, 1988 (Soviet Union)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Heart of a Dog
    • Production company
      • Lenfilm Studio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 16 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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