King for a Day (1983 film)

King for a Day (Bulgarian: Господин за един ден / Gospodin za edin den) is a Bulgarian comedy-drama film released in 1983, directed by Nikolay Volev, starring Todor Kolev and Itzhak Fintzi. The screenplay is written by Nikola Statkov based on his short stories “The Outlander” and “The Mister”.

Господин за един ден
Gospodin za edin den
(King for a Day)
Directed byNikolay Volev
Written byNikola Statkov
StarringTodor Kolev
Itzhak Fintzi
Yordanka Stefanova
Stoyan Gadev
Ivan Grigorov
Music byIvan Staykov
CinematographyKrasimir Kostov
Production
company
Release date
1983
Running time
87 minutes
CountryBulgaria
LanguageBulgarian

The main character Purko (Todor Kolev) is a poor peasant with many children, constantly starting extravagant initiatives to get out of poverty during the hard times between the two world wars. The only consolation he finds in the music with his clarinet and his inborn musical talent until one day he meets an elegant couple from a town. They promise him prosperity if he mortgages his house and invests the money in their business.

This is the second out of three super hit films, featuring Todor Kolev in the leading role, released during the 1980s. The others are The Double (1980) directed also by Nikolay Volev and Dangerous Charm (1984) directed by Ivan Andonov. The performance by Kolev, with a reference to the great comedians of the silent cinema,[1] received a broad critical acclaim.

Cast

  • Todor Kolev as Asparuh Kanchev - Purko
  • Itzhak Fintzi as the tax-collector
  • Yordanka Stefanova as Purko's wife
  • Stoyan Gadev as the priest
  • Ivan Grigorov as Mito the barefooted (a fellow-villager)
  • Nikola Pashov as the village mayor
  • Ivan Obretenov as a fellow-villager
  • Trifon Dzhonev as Bay Linko, the tavern-keeper
  • Veliko Stoyanov
  • Pavel Popandov
  • Georgi Mamalev as the engineer Kerkelezov (eccentric inventor)
  • Boris Radinevski
  • Kina Mutafova

References

Sources

  • Gencheva, Galina (2008). Bulgarian Feature Films encyclopedia. Sofia: Publishing house "Dr Ivan Bogorov". ISBN 978-954-316-069-3.
  • Kovachev, Pencho (2008). 50 Golden Bulgarian Films. Sofia: Publishing house "Zahariy Stoyanov". ISBN 978-954-09-0281-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.