Peculiarities of the National Hunt

Peculiarities of the National Hunt (Russian: Особенности национальной охоты, romanized: Osobennosti natsionalnoy okhoty) is a 1995 Russian comedy film. As soon as it was released in 1995 it became a nationwide success in Russia, the leader at the Russian box office. It won the Nika Award and Kinotavr awards. It was followed by several other "Peculiarities..." films.[1]

Peculiarities of the National Hunt
VHS cover
Directed byAleksandr Rogozhkin
Produced byAleksandr Golutva
Written byAleksandr Rogozhkin
StarringAleksei Buldakov
Viktor Bychkov
Sergey Gusinsky
Semen Strugachev
Sergey Russkin
Sergey Kupryanov
Ville Haapasalo
Music byVladimir Panchenko
CinematographyAndrei Zhegalov
Edited byTamara Denisova
Distributed byLenfilm
Release date
  • 1995 (1995)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian, English, Finnish, German

Plot

A young Finn, Raivo (Ville Haapasalo), studying Russian manners and traditions, convinces his friend Zhenya [Eugene] (Sergey Kupriyanov) to help him participate in a real hunt in order to better familiarize himself with its peculiarities. They band together with a company led by an ex-army general Ivolgin (Alexey Buldakov) and set off to a distant cordon in the woods, taking with them several cases of vodka.

Waiting for them at the cordon is an eccentric huntsman, Kuzmich (Viktor Bychkov), who occupies himself with meditation and Japanese culture, and some big-city types from St. Petersburg.

Instead of the expected hunt, Raivo finds himself encountering rampant drinking and adventures. The plot can be divided into several vignettes – an incident with a bear in a sauna, the fireworks, the story of the rural policeman who lost his pistol, the scene on the farm, the story about the cow being transported in the weapons bay in a modern bomber (Tupolev Tu-22M) in exchange for a bottle of vodka, the drive in a "borrowed" police car UAZ to get to know some local milkmaids, etc.

In the whirlwind of drinking and good times, the hunt itself takes a secondary or even tertiary position.

The second plot line are the Finn’s daydreams of a real hunt based on his impressions from classic Russian literature. Short episodes from the pre-revolutionary period periodically appear throughout the film as inserts woven into the primary storyline. “Historical” hunting differs greatly from the modern version. The participants of the traditional hunt, unlike their would-be hunter contemporaries, enjoy conversation in French, flirting with women and constant treats without forgetting what’s important – tracking a large wolf.

The contrasting story lines of the foolish contemporary fumbling and the circumspect traditional entertainment intersect in the finale. Raivo's surreal experience is highlighted by several peculiar incidents. e.g. Kuzmich picking a pineapple from the hedgerow, Earth being visible in the night sky etc.

A notable feature of the film is the range of different languages which are spoken by the characters throughout: Russian, English, Finnish, German, and French.

Cast

References

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