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Hello, Willie! (0+)

Russia, 2007, colour, 45 min.
Directors: Evgeniy Golynkin, Raisa Malova
In the late 1980s, a street musician appeared in Moscow who called himself German Baron von Draugel and claimed to be a disciple of the famous jazz musician Eddie Rosner. He asserted that in 1945, as a young boy, he was taken prisoner by Soviet forces, spent half of his life in Magadan camps, and it was there that Rosner taught him to play the trumpet. He told numerous stories about himself, the authenticity of which the well-known Moscow journalist Gennady Zhavoronkov tried to verify. As a result of this journalistic investigation, a completely different picture emerges...

Evgeniy Golynkin

Evgeniy Golynkin

was born in Leningrad in 1951. He graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Theatre, Music and Cinematography, faculty of Directing, the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors at State Cinema of the USSR. He worked at the Leningrad studio of documentary films, the West Siberian studio of a newsreel, the Central studio of documentaries, and the central studio of educational films. Since 1993, he is the director of Clio Studio. He is the member of the Union of Cinematographers, the member of arts council on the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors.

FILMOGRAPHY

Late Date, 1998; Hello,Willy, 2007; Time of Change 2011; The City of Angels or Private Life of the Artist Pimenov, 2012; “The Heart" Forty Years Later, 2016; Everyone Wants to Live Forever, 2017, The Woman Who Built Cities, 2021.

Raisa Malova

Raisa Malova

graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Theatre, Music, and Cinematography. She is a director of numerous documentary films and programs and a participant in Russian film festivals.

FILMOGRAPHY

Late Date, 1998; Hello, Willie!, 2007.
Russia, 2007, colour, 45 min.
Directors: Evgeniy Golynkin, Raisa Malova
In the late 1980s, a street musician appeared in Moscow who called himself German Baron von Draugel and claimed to be a disciple of the famous jazz musician Eddie Rosner. He asserted that in 1945, as a young boy, he was taken prisoner by Soviet forces, spent half of his life in Magadan camps, and it was there that Rosner taught him to play the trumpet. He told numerous stories about himself, the authenticity of which the well-known Moscow journalist Gennady Zhavoronkov tried to verify. As a result of this journalistic investigation, a completely different picture emerges...