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Salle n°6 - Tchékhov

Original title: Palata N°6
  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
861
YOUR RATING
Salle n°6 - Tchékhov (2009)
Drama

Simultaneously nihilistic and heartening, Ward No. 6 is based on a story by Chekov, in which a psychiatric doctor becomes a patient in his own asylum. Updated to contemporary Russia, the fil... Read allSimultaneously nihilistic and heartening, Ward No. 6 is based on a story by Chekov, in which a psychiatric doctor becomes a patient in his own asylum. Updated to contemporary Russia, the film is a cocktail of anxieties and riddles, showcasing how easy it is to become what we fear... Read allSimultaneously nihilistic and heartening, Ward No. 6 is based on a story by Chekov, in which a psychiatric doctor becomes a patient in his own asylum. Updated to contemporary Russia, the film is a cocktail of anxieties and riddles, showcasing how easy it is to become what we fear most.

  • Directors
    • Aleksandr Gornovskiy
    • Karen Shakhnazarov
  • Writers
    • Aleksandr Borodyanskiy
    • Anton Chekhov
    • Karen Shakhnazarov
  • Stars
    • Vladimir Ilin
    • Aleksey Vertkov
    • Aleksandr Pankratov-Chyornyy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    861
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Aleksandr Gornovskiy
      • Karen Shakhnazarov
    • Writers
      • Aleksandr Borodyanskiy
      • Anton Chekhov
      • Karen Shakhnazarov
    • Stars
      • Vladimir Ilin
      • Aleksey Vertkov
      • Aleksandr Pankratov-Chyornyy
    • 7User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos18

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Vladimir Ilin
    Vladimir Ilin
    • Ragin
    Aleksey Vertkov
    Aleksey Vertkov
    • Gromov
    Aleksandr Pankratov-Chyornyy
    Aleksandr Pankratov-Chyornyy
    • Mikhail Averyanovich
    Evgeniy Stychkin
    Evgeniy Stychkin
    • Khobotov
    Viktor Solovyov
    Viktor Solovyov
    • Nikita
    Aleksey Zharkov
    Aleksey Zharkov
    • Old chief physician
    Albina Evtushevskaya
    • Darya
    Anna Sinyakina
      Alina Olshanskaya
        Stanislav Eventov
          Dmitriy Gusev
          Dmitriy Gusev
            Oleg Shapko
            Oleg Shapko
              Ye. Golyandin
              Yu. Soroka
              S. Semenkova
              Ye. Kasparova
              Zh. Gendel
              K. Gendel
              • Directors
                • Aleksandr Gornovskiy
                • Karen Shakhnazarov
              • Writers
                • Aleksandr Borodyanskiy
                • Anton Chekhov
                • Karen Shakhnazarov
              • All cast & crew
              • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

              User reviews7

              6.3861
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              Featured reviews

              RResende

              the middle section

              Film and Life. Ficcion and Documentary. Here's two pairs of concepts which could, if we'd like, be placed on opposite corners of the labeling maps. For that same reason, these are concepts which intersect, come close to being confused and considered the same. Each of these two pairs holds inside it the magic of a magnetic repulsion/attraction. Maybe that's why so much has been said and written and filmed as to what film borrows from life (and how life can be affected by films). Also how thin is the difference between wanting to document something and creating a story that is already in the creators eye.

              Shakhnazarov seems to be a dislocated guy. Someone born within the values of the great soviet school, but who lost that context early in his career. Today he makes disembodied soviet films. And also he doesn't really represent any of the two major soviet contributions to cinema (leaded by Eisenstein and Tarkovsky, respectively). For this, i don't think i'll ever watch one of his films that does more than merely amuse me in how clever were the intentions behind it.

              In this case, what he wanted to do was not novel, but it's not very well done either. He starts the film presenting us with a series of interviews to real ill people from a real mental institution. Than he delivers a fiction, with fiction characters modelled after the real ill people, and acted in the same physical place, the hospital. This is actually a very clever idea. The interviews place us in the world of the mental cases, so we need no more establishing of the world of the film. So, we get fully inside the film and that's something rarely done in such a clear effective way. The problem is that nothing else is worth your time. there is a very literature driven approach to the dialog writing, and that kills the film, which is also not carried well enough by the performances. Dialogs or acting are the things that can carry such a film. Non exists with quality here.

              The closing scene is as clever as the initial one. Real patients meet fictitious ones, and they dance, with mixed pairs. Documented reality merges with fictionalized reality. The entry, and this last sequence almost redeem the lack of anything else in the film.

              My opinion: 2/5

              http://www.7eyes.wordpress.com
              10ninajey

              Just brilliant!

              I think Ward No.6 is an absolutely perfect film. Great acting , script, directing, and so on. Sometimes you watch a film and only after you have finished the whole film, you realise how great it was. Sometimes you like some bits from a film, but this one - Ward No. 6 is great from the beginning to end! Just brilliant!
              1peru1-595-630106

              sad mostly degradation of mental patients

              This movie was awful. I worked for years as a psychiatrist at a state mental hospital and could instantly identify the real patients---to me portraying them in this run down hospital stuffed full of drugs was depressing. I particularly disliked the full of him self new Doctor who had a fast pat answer for all of them and their conditions.

              There was nothing intellectually or artistically stimulating about watching these poor people... and there was nothing intelligent about the story superimposed on them at least in the confusing way this film portrays it.

              Apparently in the original short story (By Chekhov) a Doctor finds the most interesting person in the backwater where the psychiatric instution is located is one of the paranoid schizophrenics. That is believable. In the original story this Doctor is tricked into being admitted into the hospital...also believable but none of this comes out in this movie! In the movie this Doctors best friend runs a store or so it seems. And then this Doctor is admitted and has a stroke. None of it is explained...

              I also felt sorry for the patients being filmed. The ending with kids laughing was supposed to be deep in some way and like the rest of this movie is nothing more than meaningless garbage thinking it is deep or artful.

              Also cheaply filmed and very erratic camera work.

              DO NOT RECOMMEND
              6lee_eisenberg

              Chekhov's and Shakhnazarov's mental institution

              Karen Shakhnazarov's "Palata No. 6" ("Ward No. 6" in English) is an adaptation of an Anton Chekhov story. Having never read Chekhov's story, I can only comment on the movie. At first I was reminded of Christopher Guest's mockumentaries, as the characters describe their predicaments (filmed in a naturalistic style). But then the story begins, as one of the doctors begins to question his profession. To be certain, what this movie portrays is no laughing matter.

              The movie might seem slow to some viewers. It's like that for a reason. It gives the patient time to explain his philosophy to the doctor. The movie poses the question of which people can be considered insane in a rotten-to-the-core society (much like how "A Clockwork Orange" does). Most of the movie takes place indoors, emphasizing the feeling of imprisonment.

              I don't know that I would call it a masterpiece, but it's worth seeing. It not only addresses the issue of insanity, but also shows the horrible conditions in the mental institutions. I'd say that it was the right choice for Russia's submission to the Academy Awards that year.
              10guisreis

              Brilliant, layered, sophisticated, deep, innovative

              Brilliant Mosfilm movie by Karen Shakhnazarov adapted from a text by Anton Chekhov. Extremely innovative, with bright dialogues, beautiful and sophisticated cinematography, highly skilled acting, interesting usage of mockumentary elements. It is layered, deep, hard to synthetize, and opens various thoughts. I am sure that the more I re-visit it, new insights will rise. The old question about what is the limit between sanity and madness is in the core here, but it goes beyond. When being cynical and careless is the mediocre norm (being that little town a metaphor for general mediocrity), clever and critical spirit may be diagnosed as crazy. Dr. Andrey Yefimitch Ragin's path actually seems to cross from one pole to the other. Other characters also could be personally interested in having Ragin labeled as mentally ill. As a matter of fact, Ragin's perception about life conditions changes a lot when he changes his side, confirming that materialistic arguments by Gromov were more correct than his Kantian ones mentioning Diogenes. To resume, it is a major film, with smart philosophical elements.

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              Storyline

              Edit

              Did you know

              Edit
              • Trivia
                Russia's official submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 82th Annual Academy Awards (2010).
              • Quotes

                [first lines]

                Vladimir Kozlov: Vladimir Vladimirovich Kozlov, born in 1979, on August 15.

                Interviewer: For how many years have you lived here?

                Vladimir Kozlov: This is... the fifth year.

                Interviewer: Where did you live before you came to this nursing home?

              • Connections
                Featured in 8½ Kinoklub Dyskusiynyi (2016)
              • Soundtracks
                Akapulko
                Music by Igor Krutoy

                Lyrics by Viktor Pelenyagre

                Performed by Laima Vaikule

                Played at the New Year party

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              Details

              Edit
              • Release date
                • May 5, 2010 (France)
              • Country of origin
                • Russia
              • Official sites
                • Mosfilm [rus]
                • Official site (Russia)
              • Language
                • Russian
              • Also known as
                • Salle n°6 - Tchekhov
              • Filming locations
                • Dmitrovsky rayon, Moskovskaya oblast, Russia(mental health nursing home)
              • Production company
                • Mosfilm
              • See more company credits at IMDbPro

              Box office

              Edit
              • Gross worldwide
                • $115,095
              See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

              Tech specs

              Edit
              • Runtime
                1 hour 23 minutes
              • Color
                • Color

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