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L'homme de boulevard des Capucines

Original title: Chelovek s bulvara Kaputsinov
  • 1987
  • PG-13
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
L'homme de boulevard des Capucines (1987)
ComedyMusicalRomanceWestern

Mr Jonny First arrives to the Wild West to present the art of the Cinematograph.Mr Jonny First arrives to the Wild West to present the art of the Cinematograph.Mr Jonny First arrives to the Wild West to present the art of the Cinematograph.

  • Director
    • Alla Surikova
  • Writer
    • Eduard Akopov
  • Stars
    • Andrey Mironov
    • Aleksandra Yakovleva
    • Mikhail Boyarskiy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    3.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alla Surikova
    • Writer
      • Eduard Akopov
    • Stars
      • Andrey Mironov
      • Aleksandra Yakovleva
      • Mikhail Boyarskiy
    • 10User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos68

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    Top cast47

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    Andrey Mironov
    Andrey Mironov
    • Johnny First
    Aleksandra Yakovleva
    Aleksandra Yakovleva
    • Ms. Diana Little
    • (as Aleksandra Asmaye)
    Mikhail Boyarskiy
    Mikhail Boyarskiy
    • Chyorniy (Black) Jack
    Oleg Tabakov
    Oleg Tabakov
    • Harry MacCue
    Nikolay Karachentsov
    Nikolay Karachentsov
    • Billy King
    • (as N. Karachentsov)
    Igor Kvasha
    Igor Kvasha
    • Pastor
    • (as I. Kvasha)
    Lev Durov
    Lev Durov
    • Grobovshchik
    • (as L. Durov)
    Galina Polskikh
    Galina Polskikh
    • Mrs. Thompson
    • (as G. Polskikh)
    Natalya Krachkovskaya
    Natalya Krachkovskaya
    • Conchita
    • (as N. Krachkovskaya)
    Natalya Fateeva
    Natalya Fateeva
    • Zhena vozhdya
    • (as N. Fateyeva)
    Spartak Mishulin
    Spartak Mishulin
    • Vozhd indeytsev
    • (as S. Mishulin)
    Albert Filozov
    Albert Filozov
    • Mr. Second
    • (as A. Filozov)
    Oleg Anofriev
    Oleg Anofriev
    • Tapyor
    • (as O. Anorfriyev)
    Mikhail Svetin
    Mikhail Svetin
    • Aptekar
    • (as M. Svetin)
    Leonid Yarmolnik
    Leonid Yarmolnik
    • Martin
    • (as L. Yarmolnik)
    Semyon Farada
    Semyon Farada
    • Mr. Thompson
    • (as S. Farada)
    Aleksandr Pavlov
    Aleksandr Pavlov
    • Usatyy kovboy
    • (as A. Pavlov)
    Yuriy Medvedev
    Yuriy Medvedev
    • Staffi
    • (as Yu. Medvedev)
    • Director
      • Alla Surikova
    • Writer
      • Eduard Akopov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    7.63.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9alekspredator87

    Billy, charge up!

    "The Man from Capuchin Boulevard" is without a doubt an extraordinary film. This is a movie with a capital letter, which takes exactly its unique atmosphere and memorable plot. The Soviet western sends the viewer to enjoy a kind of interpretation of the origin of cinema in the Wild West. And the entire film crew, and especially the brilliant acting of the actors, will allow you to plunge into the fascinating and sometimes touching world of the distant past on another continent.

    The film was one of the last appearances in the cinema of the talented actor Andrey Mironov. In the year of release - 1987 - the artist was gone. An incredible loss for the entire national cinema. I'm sure Mironov could give us a dozen more memorable images. Perhaps because the role in this film was one of the last, I remember it so well. The actor created a unique image of Johnny First. A true gentleman, a missionary from cinema, a very polite and positive character from all sides, who is designed to introduce the masses to an amazing revolutionary phenomenon - cinema. The picture will show how interesting and with very funny adventures the hero will take up this event.

    There are many other actors of the first magnitude in the film, who also successfully merge into this picture: Oleg Tabakov, Nikolai Karachentsov, Mikhail Boyarsky, Alexandra Yakovleva, Igor Kvasha, Lev Durov and many, many others. Each of the artists, regardless of screen time, elegantly fits into the created world, creating that unique atmosphere that the viewer enjoys throughout the narrative. Black Jack, played by Boyarsky, contrasts sharply with his usual image of D'Artagnan. Great performance: absolutely different charisma, piercing gaze and literally animal danger emanating from the hero. Karachentsov and his Billy are a magnificent demonstration of the transformation of a gangster into a polite... gangster. Bartender Harry is another opportunity for actor Tabakov to transform into an extraordinary personality and really get into the image. Kvasha was pleased with a superbly worked-out hero pastor, and Spartak Mishulin became a pleasant-looking Indian leader. Alexandra Yakovleva and her Diana Little have become the personification of new assumptions in cinema. The actress presented an unforgettable image of a sexually liberated heroine. Watching her, I constantly wondered how such a thing was allowed on the screens in those days. But it was a great image.

    The film was released in 1987. The time of Perestroika, new trends, new hopes, new opportunities in the cinema. On the screen you can see something unusual that inspires a certain freedom. Experiments and unexpected solutions are acceptable, which the viewer necessarily notices. At the same time, capitalist values are ridiculed quite interestingly in the picture, as if reminding us that we are still watching Soviet cinema. There are also a lot of other cliches from that time and place, which, in my opinion, are perfectly ridiculed. The authors well demonstrate frank laughter at Western westerns, successfully beating what could really be seen in those pictures. Here you have constant quarrels, fights, and shooting. Without this, it seems, nowhere. However, the creators joke funny enough for the domestic viewer, you definitely get pleasure.

    The picture is full of various fights, songs, shooting, dancing, explosions, sparkling humor. In this picture, all this is successfully woven into an interesting plot. It feels like the creators really wanted to surprise the viewer and make the film memorable for a long time. What to say. They did it well. And some quotes are still used in our society.

    "The Man from Capuchin Boulevard" is a landmark movie, an epoch-making picture that will surely please the audience today. This is an unshakable classic, a symbol of the era, of the time when it began to seem that once in the domestic cinema you can see such freedom of thought and performance, then all this will soon be in society. And even though what was happening in reality was happening, this film became an obvious victory of its time. An extraordinary picture, an amazing acting game, a gorgeous story that you sometimes want to revisit again.

    9 out of 10.
    sasha-1

    Perfect comedy

    That's a beautiful comedy with a number of Russian film stars. The plot is rather unusual for a comedy western. One of the first cinematographers(his name is Mr.First performed by Andrey Mironov) arrives in a sleepy Wild West town and brings a primitive film projector with a number of bobbins of first Chaplin-like films. Every night he shows films in the local saloon and his arrival has a dramatical effect on the local cowboys(probably "cowboys" will seem rather strange for real Americans, but don't forget the film is made in Russia and they also have some stereotypes about the Wild West). After his arrival they stop fighting with each other,stop speaking bad words, start behaving very politely("like real gentlemen"), and in the evenings come to the saloon to have a drink of ... milk, instead of whiskey!!! After solving many problems and passing through a wall of misunderstanding Mr.First makes a lot of friends and eventually the local beauty Diana falls in love with him. The film has a lot of funny episodes and twists e.g. the local Comanches start the war with the cowboys only to have a possibility to go to the movie saloon as well.It's really worth watching the film wherever you live.
    10levelclearer

    As we dreamed since long, but still can not live up to....

    I like the super-task of the "Сinema man" (The man from Cappuchino boulevard), but I never can understand what made them in 1987 (Chrushev is dead) want to clash the cinema and the Church. This seems to make the movie very very lame. Just answer me, when you hit a God-forsaken American town, how often do you meet an evil, carnal Pastor ? Everyone, absolutely everyone in this town, including the bar owner, the Indian Chief, and the local hit-man Black Joe are good people, at least they have good soul strings. Only Church Pastor stands out as pitch black, as absolute evil. You know, I don't like such plain con gaming. Even the world of cinema men has good and bad representatives like Mr.First who features good manners, good and high feelings, gentleness, kindness, and everything good you know about the cinema, and Mr.Second who disseminates violence, low style, fights, perhaps toilet humor, horrors, nudity and sex, and everything bad you know about the cinema. But when it comes to Church you have only one pitch black Jewish evil carnal Pastor who's dream is to rape a lady singing in the bar. Well, even if you tell me that evil, carnal, raping Pastors are as frequent in the USA as Coca-Cola dispensers, this still can not be a reason to bang a traveling cinema man against the Church. Even local hit-man Black Joe turns better than Pastor. What is this ? What thoughts shall this provoke ? The only clue thrown in is Mr. First's song "without rage and mourning for the benefit of the planet Earth as we dreamed since long but still can not live up to our dream". Well, perhaps's that's it. A spoof of the American dream, a mock of the shining city on the hill ? And the evil lustful Pastor is an American Pastor namely and exclusively? Kh-m, you should have warned me, that this gonna be so, eh, particular. The movie was shot in 1987 when we in Russia were going full speed for universal human values, everything was going to be for us so universal, and an evil Pastor in the US could mean only an equally evil Priest on the other side of the pond. Well, were we really supposed to take seriously that cinema is going to save the world ? And all this garnished with carefully choreographed fist fights in the saloon, fighting Indians, and "Lemonade Joe" style story of how a rotten dangerous hole of American town turned into a descent place thanks to the traveling projector ? Strange movie though, with a message buried more deeper than the eventual plot, otherwise with no message at all. Well, as strange and mesmerizing as Irina Fateeva and Spartak Michulin as Indian Chief couple.
    10kurciasbezdalas

    One of the best soviet comedies

    This is one of those good old soviet comedies. The humor in these films is pretty innocent but still very funny. This film contains many Russian stars of that time. The plot is quite original. It's about a town in Wild West who's people are only drinking and fighting every single day and about an intelligent man who arrive to the town to introduce towns people with Cinematography. Soon people of town get fascinated by cinema, they stop drinking and fighting and become more polite to each other. The movie is really funny and interesting. Though this is not a action film, i've noticed some well choreographed fighting scenes. This film is really worth your time.
    7RosanaBotafogo

    Prestigious and Regular...

    Despite the film criticism, the idolatry of violent westerns, bloodthirsty, decimating Indians, misogynists, pigs and disgusting, produced by a woman in the Soviet cinema, the film is not very captivating, well produced, great social context, but it lacked something that I could cling, feel empathy, and the protagonist didn't contribute either... Prestigious and Regular...

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The most successful film at the box office that was released in the USSR in 1987.
    • Quotes

      Cowboy: I am not going to talk to this ape with a painted face!

      Chief of Comanches: I forgive the pale face. He has not heard of Sir Charles Darwin and does not know that ape is our common ancestor.

    • Connections
      Featured in Oleg Tabakov. Smotryu na mir vlyublyonnymi glazami (2015)

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    FAQ12

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 23, 1987 (Soviet Union)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • A Man from Boulevard des Capucines
    • Production company
      • Mosfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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