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Permshchik Robert Belov (18+)

Russia, 2005, 39 min.
Director: Sergei Lepikhin
White haired oldman named Robert Belov is blind and weak but his thunder like voice claims openly his hatred to any government. With all that he gently loves poetry and people anyhow connected to poetry. He loves Perm – the region of prisons – where the government always did exile poets and killers. And Robert writes about them a book of “salty” anecdotes under the name “Permshchina”. With a company of occasional companions he goes to travel the places of Urals connected with Boris Pasternak, a poet and writer. He makes the landscapes and voices sound differently and thus creates an informal, living guide for the surroundings of Kama-river.

Sergei Lepikhin

Sergei Lepikhin

was born on 8 June 1955 in Permskaya Oblast. He graduated from VGIK (feature film department) as director of photography in cinema and television (1989). Since 1991 he has been a member of the Russian Filmmakers Union. He participated in creation of many documentary and feature films and programs. Nowadays he is a director and cinematographer at various Perm TV-companies and studios.

FILMOGRAPHY

«Banka», 1985; «Little Ostrich Young», 1987; «While the River Sleeps», 1989; «Zebra-I», 1993; «About Olya in Captivity», 1993; «Zebra-II», 1994; «Mission "Interception"», 1995; «75 Circles of Success», 1997, «Thus Assigned by Fate…», 1997; «The Knowing and the Doing Against the Infections», «Narcomania A La Russ», 2000; «Kryak», 2000; «The Story Just Begins», 2001; «The Ural Portal», 2004-2009; «Permshchik Robert Belov», «Permshchina», 2008; «Tracing the Great Inventor», 2009; «Barge Haulers on the Kama», 2013; «Ivan Semyonov Passion», 2013.
Russia, 2005, 39 min.
Director: Sergei Lepikhin
White haired oldman named Robert Belov is blind and weak but his thunder like voice claims openly his hatred to any government. With all that he gently loves poetry and people anyhow connected to poetry. He loves Perm – the region of prisons – where the government always did exile poets and killers. And Robert writes about them a book of “salty” anecdotes under the name “Permshchina”. With a company of occasional companions he goes to travel the places of Urals connected with Boris Pasternak, a poet and writer. He makes the landscapes and voices sound differently and thus creates an informal, living guide for the surroundings of Kama-river.