Two Russians push the wrong button on a strange device and end up on the telepathic planet Pluke with its strange societal norms.Two Russians push the wrong button on a strange device and end up on the telepathic planet Pluke with its strange societal norms.Two Russians push the wrong button on a strange device and end up on the telepathic planet Pluke with its strange societal norms.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 3 wins & 1 nomination total
Irina Shmelyova
- Tsan - Desert Stage Cart Driver
- (as Irina Shmeleva)
Anatoliy Serenko
- Space Drifter from Uzm
- (as A.Serenko)
Aleksandra Dorokhina
- Huge Woman at Subway Station
- (as A. Dorokhina)
Olesya Ivanova
- Fat Woman Settled under Ferris Wheel
- (as O. Ivanova)
Tatyana Novitskaya
- Presentation Crystal Owner
- (as T. Novitskaya)
Tatyana Perfileva
- Old Woman in Subway Cart
- (as T.Perfilyeva)
Lyudmila Solodenko
- Swarthy Woman Settled under Ferris Wheel
- (as L. Solodenko)
Galina Daneliya-Yurkova
- Lyudmila Mashkova - 'Lucia'
- (as G. Yurkova)
Igor Bogolyubov
- Lord PG's Personal Patsak
- (as I.Bogolyubov)
Valentin Bukin
- Desert-Patrol Ecilopp
- (as V.Bukin)
Yuriy Voronkov
- The Bearded Big Man at Subway Station
- (as Y. Voronkov)
Nikolay Garo
- Lord PG - Pluk Planet Dictator
- (as N.Garo)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"Kin-dza-dza" is a cult movie in Russia - and, in fact, it deserves this status completely, being an absolutely unique, minimalistic and freaky science fiction flick. Completely fantastic - and did I mention minimalistic? - art direction, excellent casting, and, of course, an anti-utopic plot that had miraculously slipped by the Soviet censorship, make this movie a true classic.
Mr. Spielberg, eat your heart out. All that "Light and Magic", and you still never came close to doing anything like this.
Mr. Spielberg, eat your heart out. All that "Light and Magic", and you still never came close to doing anything like this.
There isn't much I have to say about "Kin Dza Dza" that hasn't been said by the previous reviewers. But I like this movie so much that I could not resist throwing in my two cents. Yea, it's primitively, or, as someone has pointed out, minimalistically done, so don't expect any special effects. But you know what, who needs them when the movie is that good. The galaxy "Kin Dza Dza" is the slums of the universe, and it shows us our alternate, post-apocalyptic future with a great sense of humor, pantomime and sarcasm. Great cast too. Lyubshin, Leonov and Yakovlev do a fine job here. Since the film's director is Georgian, some Georgian gags were thrown in as well. Oh, and did anyone notice Dyadya Vova's and Gedevan Aleksandrovich's renditions of Frank Sinatra's songs? "Blade Runner," "Brazil," "The Road Warrior," and, to a lesser extent, Luc Besson's "The Final Combat" are all considered to be the classics of the post-apocalyptic, anti-utopian movie worlds. Well, you can add "Kin Dza Dza" to this list.
10joalogon
Please, before seeing this film, let your political ideologies outside the room and just prepare to laugh with this original pearl.
It's fairly unknown outside Russia, and sometimes I wonder if I'm the only Spaniard having seen it....I hope not, such a pity!.
This film is a complete classic in Russia and has even transformed local talking, so don't be surprised if you walk one day by the streets of Moscow and you see two friends who meet and say "Koo!" each other, or if someone is bothering and he is sent away by an "Violinist players, we don't need them!".
The story is fantastic and engaged. It's one of those films who makes you laugh and sit for a while thinking about life. Maybe you don't agree to everything but is worth the reflexion. The filming is direct and simple (you're going to laugh, but not for the same reasons, special effect's lovers) and the acting is superb.
One of the best comedies ever made in Russia.
It's fairly unknown outside Russia, and sometimes I wonder if I'm the only Spaniard having seen it....I hope not, such a pity!.
This film is a complete classic in Russia and has even transformed local talking, so don't be surprised if you walk one day by the streets of Moscow and you see two friends who meet and say "Koo!" each other, or if someone is bothering and he is sent away by an "Violinist players, we don't need them!".
The story is fantastic and engaged. It's one of those films who makes you laugh and sit for a while thinking about life. Maybe you don't agree to everything but is worth the reflexion. The filming is direct and simple (you're going to laugh, but not for the same reasons, special effect's lovers) and the acting is superb.
One of the best comedies ever made in Russia.
I'm really surprised about the commentators referring to "сrappy special effects" in Kin-dza-dza. Are you crazy guys ? Re-watch "Terminator" with all that crappy cheezy stop-motion in bare endosceletone scenes. LEGO brick movies fans shoot the same with a cheap camera. Just think that "сrappy soviet SFX" in Kin-dza-dza uses no stop-motion or scale-down, all Plukan flying tech moves absolutely smoothly and is integrated into the picture completely seamlessly. Compare this to any famous same age sci-fis. Robocop-2 uses stop-motion to animate a scale-down figure of Robocain, and Robocop is a live actor imitating robo-moves inside a costume. And in Kin-dza-dza you see all fantastic Plukan flying tech like real-time real-size (no scale down, no stop-motion) moving objects integrated into the picture seamlessly. So please, just don't confuse the minimalistic design of Plukan starcrafts which is an important part of the scenario with poor rendition of SFX in this movie. Plukan tech is minimalistic dirty rusty crappy looking squeaking - it was deliberately planned so by the movie makers and conveys some ideas.
10D-V
Not as dead serious as Blade Runner. Not as neon and air-conditioned as Brazil. It's not Earth, dear. It's planet Pluke. Dusty, rusty, dirty.
Amazing technology. To any point of the Universe - in five seconds flat. Unless someone borrowed one vital part of your engine without asking.
Interesting society. Everyone can read each other's mind. And still be able to lie.
A story of two Earthlings trying to get home from the cruel lying cheating stealing world of the galaxy Kin-Dza-Dza.
Definitely worth watching. Is there a subtitled copy available? I have no idea.
Amazing technology. To any point of the Universe - in five seconds flat. Unless someone borrowed one vital part of your engine without asking.
Interesting society. Everyone can read each other's mind. And still be able to lie.
A story of two Earthlings trying to get home from the cruel lying cheating stealing world of the galaxy Kin-Dza-Dza.
Definitely worth watching. Is there a subtitled copy available? I have no idea.
Did you know
- TriviaHalf the dialogue was ad-libbed.
- Quotes
Uef: If I have a little KETSE, I have the right to wear yellow pants, and any Patsak should squat twice before me, not once. If a have a lot of KETSE, I have the right to wear crimson pants, so any Patsak should squat twice, any Chatlanin should make "ku", and Etsilopp can't beat me at night...
- ConnectionsFeatured in Ravnyaetsya odnomu Gaftu (2010)
- SoundtracksStrangers in the Night
(uncredited)
Written by Bert Kaempfert, Charles Singleton and Eddie Snyder
Performed by Levan Gabriadze
- How long is Kin-dza-dza!?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Кін-дза-дза!
- Filming locations
- 26 New Arbat Avenue, Moscow, Russia(Vladimir and Gedevan meet the barefoot man)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $23,902
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content