Kidnapping, Caucasian Style
Kidnapping, Caucasian Style
| 01 April 1967 (USA)
Kidnapping, Caucasian Style Trailers

Shurik, a kind but naïve ethnography student, falls in love with the intelligent, athletic and beautiful All-Union Leninist Young Communist League member Nina. He has a rival in the wealthy comrade Saakhov, who concocts a kidnapping scheme to force Nina to marry him.

Reviews
SpuffyWeb

Sadly Over-hyped

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Greenes

Please don't spend money on this.

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Voxitype

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Phillida

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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hte-trasme

He only appeared in a few films, but the idea seems to have been to make the "Shurik" character played by Aleksandr Demyanenko into a sort of Soviet version of classic recurring slapstick characters of the type of, most famously, Chaplin's "Little Tram" -- he shows up somewhere and the character remains the same but is placed in a new comedic story-line. It works well, and this comedy benefits from being much more unifying than the previous Shurik film, "Operatsiya Y." He shows up and we're told that Shurik has arrived in the Caucasus in order to study folklore. We don't need to know anything more, but it does lead to a funny running gag, where everyone he meets forces on him way more alcohol than he can handle because he said he would be studying traditional toasts. This movie is very funny, seeming to find just the right combination of classic old-fashioned slapstick, outright goofiness, and a good farcical plot. The story, which is based around a traditional Caucasion bride- kidnapping turning into a real kidnapping, is just enough to keep funny misunderstandings going, but not get in the way of good gags pr set pieces. There's also a lot of Central Asian local-color to be seen -- as part of the concept is taking the retiring city-boy Shurik and putting him in an interesting location -- and that's just interesting from any perspective. Though Shurik is nominally the protagonist, a lot of the comedy show is stolen by the band of three villains (including one who has the only postwar Hitler moustache I've seen on anyone but Michael Jordan or Robert Mugabe) who channel the Three Stoges in their slapstick attempts to get things done. Natalya Varley is a lot of fun to watch as she apparently invests her role with a superhuman amount of verve, and the two songs are both highly catchy. So on the whole this one's a winner, and just plain funny throughout.

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Gunars Pastars

I't is one of the best motion pictures from that time(1950-1970). This movie represents very much of that time like the traditions, cheating, and the stealing, and not to forget the unforgettable atmosphere of these movies. watching this movie you can see how was the living in the USSR union. I found funny the scene where Shurik was riding on the donkey(at the end of the movie) on an asphalted road, the funny thing is that, that so good roads were hard to find in the USSR. i think that the crew who where searching the places where to film the movie where exhausted searching in the caucasus such a good road.I would say that everyone who wants to see how lived the people in the USSR, should watch this movie. p.s. sorry for my poor English skills. :)

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ybelov-2

Probably the best Soviet comedy, loved by all Russians, be they now capitalists, communists, nationalists or whatever. Star actors of our cinema. Many lines have become sayings in Russian. The Caucasus of the Soviet times, gone forever... 10/10.

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_Sergey_

One of the best Russian (Former Soviet Union) comedies. Very light, funny and smart. I have watched it many times and had lots of good laugh. There is virtually no Russian who has not watched this good old classic comedy.

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