Viktor Kossakovsky

Viktor Kossakovsky

Nacimiento : 1961-07-19, Leningrad, USSR (St. Petersburg, Russia)

Historia

Viktor Kossakovsky was born in St. Petersburg (Leningrad) in 1961. Began working as an assistant camera operator, assistant director, and editor at the St. Petersburg (Leningrad) Studio for Documentary Films. From 1986-1988, he studied at the Higher Courses for Screenwriters and Directors. Winner of more than a hundred prizes at Russian and international festivals.

Perfil

Viktor Kossakovsky
Viktor Kossakovsky

Películas

Gunda
Editor
Gunda es la protagonista de este tríptico documental en blanco y negro. Cuida de sus hijos, los acompaña en sus descubrimientos y luego se toma un pequeño respiro para recargar energías. Se acerca curiosa a la cámara. ¿Sabe cuál será su destino? ¿Qué es lo que estará pensando? ¿Qué pensará de nosotros? Gunda es una de los varios cientos de millones de cerdos que habitan en el planeta junto con mil millones de reses, representadas en este documental a través de dos vacas, y más de 20 mil millones de pollos. Estén jugando en el barro, sacudiéndose las moscas o buscando gusanos, todos ellos son héroes. Y en esta obra, el ensayista Víctor Kossakovsky se muestra inflexible: después de verla, consumir carne simplemente no es posible.
Gunda
Director of Photography
Gunda es la protagonista de este tríptico documental en blanco y negro. Cuida de sus hijos, los acompaña en sus descubrimientos y luego se toma un pequeño respiro para recargar energías. Se acerca curiosa a la cámara. ¿Sabe cuál será su destino? ¿Qué es lo que estará pensando? ¿Qué pensará de nosotros? Gunda es una de los varios cientos de millones de cerdos que habitan en el planeta junto con mil millones de reses, representadas en este documental a través de dos vacas, y más de 20 mil millones de pollos. Estén jugando en el barro, sacudiéndose las moscas o buscando gusanos, todos ellos son héroes. Y en esta obra, el ensayista Víctor Kossakovsky se muestra inflexible: después de verla, consumir carne simplemente no es posible.
Gunda
Screenplay
Gunda es la protagonista de este tríptico documental en blanco y negro. Cuida de sus hijos, los acompaña en sus descubrimientos y luego se toma un pequeño respiro para recargar energías. Se acerca curiosa a la cámara. ¿Sabe cuál será su destino? ¿Qué es lo que estará pensando? ¿Qué pensará de nosotros? Gunda es una de los varios cientos de millones de cerdos que habitan en el planeta junto con mil millones de reses, representadas en este documental a través de dos vacas, y más de 20 mil millones de pollos. Estén jugando en el barro, sacudiéndose las moscas o buscando gusanos, todos ellos son héroes. Y en esta obra, el ensayista Víctor Kossakovsky se muestra inflexible: después de verla, consumir carne simplemente no es posible.
Gunda
Director
Gunda es la protagonista de este tríptico documental en blanco y negro. Cuida de sus hijos, los acompaña en sus descubrimientos y luego se toma un pequeño respiro para recargar energías. Se acerca curiosa a la cámara. ¿Sabe cuál será su destino? ¿Qué es lo que estará pensando? ¿Qué pensará de nosotros? Gunda es una de los varios cientos de millones de cerdos que habitan en el planeta junto con mil millones de reses, representadas en este documental a través de dos vacas, y más de 20 mil millones de pollos. Estén jugando en el barro, sacudiéndose las moscas o buscando gusanos, todos ellos son héroes. Y en esta obra, el ensayista Víctor Kossakovsky se muestra inflexible: después de verla, consumir carne simplemente no es posible.
Aquarela
Writer
From massive waves to melting ice, filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky travels around the world to capture stunning images of the beauty and raw power of water.
Aquarela
Editor
From massive waves to melting ice, filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky travels around the world to capture stunning images of the beauty and raw power of water.
Aquarela
Director of Photography
From massive waves to melting ice, filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky travels around the world to capture stunning images of the beauty and raw power of water.
Aquarela
Director
From massive waves to melting ice, filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky travels around the world to capture stunning images of the beauty and raw power of water.
69 Minutes of 86 Days
Editor
A 3-year-old girl and her family's long journey from a Greek refugee centre to Uppsala.
Graine de champion
Director
Varicella
Director of Photography
Seven-year-old Polina and her 13-year-old sister Nastia live and breathe ballet. Both of them are studying at the Boris Eifman Dance Academy in frigid Saint Petersburg. They’re currently awaiting their grades to find out if they’ve done well enough to be promoted to the next year, with Nastia lovingly guiding he little sister through the process. But in the meantime, Nastia also has to deal with the high demands that the academy places on its students. The gorgeously styled shots are sometimes calm, even clinical, and sometimes warm, lively and funny.
Varicella
Director
Seven-year-old Polina and her 13-year-old sister Nastia live and breathe ballet. Both of them are studying at the Boris Eifman Dance Academy in frigid Saint Petersburg. They’re currently awaiting their grades to find out if they’ve done well enough to be promoted to the next year, with Nastia lovingly guiding he little sister through the process. But in the meantime, Nastia also has to deal with the high demands that the academy places on its students. The gorgeously styled shots are sometimes calm, even clinical, and sometimes warm, lively and funny.
Short Plays
Director
Football seen through the eyes of some of the best directors of the world.
Lullaby: The Phenomenon of Sleeping Near A.T.M. Machines
Writer
The filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky on homeless people sleeping near A.T.M.’s in a bank, a growing phenomenon in Europe.
Lullaby: The Phenomenon of Sleeping Near A.T.M. Machines
Director
The filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky on homeless people sleeping near A.T.M.’s in a bank, a growing phenomenon in Europe.
Where the Condors Fly
Himself
In his film, the Chilean film director accompanies Russian filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky during the shooting of his latest film. In Patagonia, at Lake Baikal and in Shanghai, Victor Kossakovsky explores the singular relationships between places and people on opposite sides of the world. Carlos Klein documents the making of this ambitious film in a very personal way, driven by his own inner search for images that still have an impact on us. While doing so, he reveals his own and Kossakovsky‘s ambiguous attitude towards filmmaking.
¡Vivan las Antipodas!
Director of Photography
What would be the shortest route between Entre Rios in Argentina and the Chinese metropolis Shanghai? Simply a straight line through the center of the earth, since the two places are antipodes: they are located diametrically opposite to each other on the earth's surface. During his visits to four such antipodal pairs, the award-winning documentary filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky captured images that turn our view of the world upside down.
¡Vivan las Antipodas!
Editor
What would be the shortest route between Entre Rios in Argentina and the Chinese metropolis Shanghai? Simply a straight line through the center of the earth, since the two places are antipodes: they are located diametrically opposite to each other on the earth's surface. During his visits to four such antipodal pairs, the award-winning documentary filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky captured images that turn our view of the world upside down.
¡Vivan las Antipodas!
Director
What would be the shortest route between Entre Rios in Argentina and the Chinese metropolis Shanghai? Simply a straight line through the center of the earth, since the two places are antipodes: they are located diametrically opposite to each other on the earth's surface. During his visits to four such antipodal pairs, the award-winning documentary filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky captured images that turn our view of the world upside down.
Svyato
Director of Photography
En ruso, "Svyato" significa tanto "feliz, transparente, alegre", como "considerado sagrado". Pero "Svyato" también es el diminutivo de Svyatoslav, el nombre de su protagonista de dos años. Por primera vez en su vida Svyato va a mirarse en un espejo.
Svyato
Script
En ruso, "Svyato" significa tanto "feliz, transparente, alegre", como "considerado sagrado". Pero "Svyato" también es el diminutivo de Svyatoslav, el nombre de su protagonista de dos años. Por primera vez en su vida Svyato va a mirarse en un espejo.
Svyato
Director
En ruso, "Svyato" significa tanto "feliz, transparente, alegre", como "considerado sagrado". Pero "Svyato" también es el diminutivo de Svyatoslav, el nombre de su protagonista de dos años. Por primera vez en su vida Svyato va a mirarse en un espejo.
Hush!
Director of Photography
The director films the street where he lives in St. Petersburg, for a whole year, documenting the changes caused by the celebration of its 300th anniversary.
Hush!
Editor
The director films the street where he lives in St. Petersburg, for a whole year, documenting the changes caused by the celebration of its 300th anniversary.
Hush!
Producer
The director films the street where he lives in St. Petersburg, for a whole year, documenting the changes caused by the celebration of its 300th anniversary.
Hush!
Writer
The director films the street where he lives in St. Petersburg, for a whole year, documenting the changes caused by the celebration of its 300th anniversary.
Hush!
Director
The director films the street where he lives in St. Petersburg, for a whole year, documenting the changes caused by the celebration of its 300th anniversary.
Kindergarten (First Romance)
Director
The toddlers in a Russian playgroup are showing a striking number of adult traits. Here and there, serious romantic relationships are budding, and some tots are determined to marry. One infant may urge her friend to keep his voice low, or else the filmmakers will hear everything they say, but most pre-schoolers are undisturbed and continue their everyday activities. They play with dolls, hang around on the playground and chatter a lot, particularly about who is whose friend and who is whose lover. In this environment, the direct cinema style seems even more natural than it usually is. Two years ago, IDFA screened Victor Kossakovsky’s film Pavel and Lyalya (a Jerusalem Romance), which dealt with the profound and unselfish love of an elderly couple. In contrast, the infatuations of young kids are volatile and playful, because ten minutes later you can be married to someone else.
I Loved You
Editor
Trilogy about love, experienced at different moments in life, by different people: an old couple, a young couple and two children at infant school.
I Loved You
Cinematography
Trilogy about love, experienced at different moments in life, by different people: an old couple, a young couple and two children at infant school.
I Loved You
Producer
Trilogy about love, experienced at different moments in life, by different people: an old couple, a young couple and two children at infant school.
I Loved You
Director
Trilogy about love, experienced at different moments in life, by different people: an old couple, a young couple and two children at infant school.
Pavel and Lyalya (A Jerusalem Romance)
Screenplay
“Like the right and left hand Your soul is close to my soul We are sealed shut, blissfully and warmly, Like the right and left wing…” The life and art of Pavel Kogan and Lyudmila Stanukinas, two famous Leningrad documentary filmmakers, can best be expressed by the Tsvetaeva stanza cited above. They are the main characters of this film, which their student Viktor Kossakovsky shot during Pavel Kogan’s final months. For Lyudmila Stanukinas, Lyalya, as those close to her called her, her husband was her only reason for existence. She was with him until the end and held onto his extinguishing life as much as she could.
Pavel and Lyalya (A Jerusalem Romance)
Director
“Like the right and left hand Your soul is close to my soul We are sealed shut, blissfully and warmly, Like the right and left wing…” The life and art of Pavel Kogan and Lyudmila Stanukinas, two famous Leningrad documentary filmmakers, can best be expressed by the Tsvetaeva stanza cited above. They are the main characters of this film, which their student Viktor Kossakovsky shot during Pavel Kogan’s final months. For Lyudmila Stanukinas, Lyalya, as those close to her called her, her husband was her only reason for existence. She was with him until the end and held onto his extinguishing life as much as she could.
Wednesday
Director
Victor Kossakovsky searched obsessively for inhabitants of St. Petersburg who were born on Wednesday 19 July 1961, his own birthday, in former Leningrad. Fifty-one women and fifty men fitted the profile. In the course of time a few of these 101 people had died, others had moved to another community or abroad. But in 1995 Kossakovsky managed to capture on film all seventy remaining residents, in the street, at work or simply at home. While doing so he spent time with doctors and patients, entertainers and businessmen, construction workers and homeless people. In his unorthodox style Kossakovsky has produced a beautiful profile of people in their thirties in St. Petersburg.
The Belovs
Writer
Portrait of a troubled peasant family. The film tells the story of two times widow Anna Belova who lives together with her brother Mikhail. Blending the two personalities, Kosakovsky characterizes the true Russian soul: she is the rational worker, honest and strong - he is the drunken poet, the idealist, his philosophy fades into radical nonsense time after time.
The Belovs
Director
Portrait of a troubled peasant family. The film tells the story of two times widow Anna Belova who lives together with her brother Mikhail. Blending the two personalities, Kosakovsky characterizes the true Russian soul: she is the rational worker, honest and strong - he is the drunken poet, the idealist, his philosophy fades into radical nonsense time after time.
Losev
Director of Photography
It was one of his mentors who once told Kossakovsky, "There are two types of intelligent people; some say what they know, while others think while they speak, in order to try and say something they did not know yet, something that suggests itself in them." Victor Kossakovsky took this profundity to heart and became a filmmaker of the second category. He dedicated his documentary debut to the speaker of these words, the Russian philosopher and religious thinker Alexey Fedorovich Losev (1893-1988), who died shortly after the completion of this film. Shot in black-and-white, the film consists of two crucial shots that symbolize silence and night at both ends of the life chain. In the beginning of the film, the rising sun slowly swathes a cemetery in daylight. At the end, the earth covers a coffin bit by bit and heralds the great darkness. In Losev's words, "Divine intentions that lie beyond our reason, that's why we die."
Losev
Editor
It was one of his mentors who once told Kossakovsky, "There are two types of intelligent people; some say what they know, while others think while they speak, in order to try and say something they did not know yet, something that suggests itself in them." Victor Kossakovsky took this profundity to heart and became a filmmaker of the second category. He dedicated his documentary debut to the speaker of these words, the Russian philosopher and religious thinker Alexey Fedorovich Losev (1893-1988), who died shortly after the completion of this film. Shot in black-and-white, the film consists of two crucial shots that symbolize silence and night at both ends of the life chain. In the beginning of the film, the rising sun slowly swathes a cemetery in daylight. At the end, the earth covers a coffin bit by bit and heralds the great darkness. In Losev's words, "Divine intentions that lie beyond our reason, that's why we die."
Losev
Screenplay
It was one of his mentors who once told Kossakovsky, "There are two types of intelligent people; some say what they know, while others think while they speak, in order to try and say something they did not know yet, something that suggests itself in them." Victor Kossakovsky took this profundity to heart and became a filmmaker of the second category. He dedicated his documentary debut to the speaker of these words, the Russian philosopher and religious thinker Alexey Fedorovich Losev (1893-1988), who died shortly after the completion of this film. Shot in black-and-white, the film consists of two crucial shots that symbolize silence and night at both ends of the life chain. In the beginning of the film, the rising sun slowly swathes a cemetery in daylight. At the end, the earth covers a coffin bit by bit and heralds the great darkness. In Losev's words, "Divine intentions that lie beyond our reason, that's why we die."
Losev
Director
It was one of his mentors who once told Kossakovsky, "There are two types of intelligent people; some say what they know, while others think while they speak, in order to try and say something they did not know yet, something that suggests itself in them." Victor Kossakovsky took this profundity to heart and became a filmmaker of the second category. He dedicated his documentary debut to the speaker of these words, the Russian philosopher and religious thinker Alexey Fedorovich Losev (1893-1988), who died shortly after the completion of this film. Shot in black-and-white, the film consists of two crucial shots that symbolize silence and night at both ends of the life chain. In the beginning of the film, the rising sun slowly swathes a cemetery in daylight. At the end, the earth covers a coffin bit by bit and heralds the great darkness. In Losev's words, "Divine intentions that lie beyond our reason, that's why we die."
Боровичи
Cinematography
Losev
Director
Director Victor Kossakovsky dedicated his documentary debut to the Russian philosopher and religious thinker Alexey Fedorovich Losev (1893-1988), who died shortly after the completion of the film.
Demonstration
Director
2012, un año de protestas masivas en todo el mundo, España es escenario de dos huelgas generales contra los planes de austeridad del gobierno. En Barcelona, los manifestantes se congregan en diversos puntos de la ciudad y la policía utiliza balas de goma para controlarlos. Las tiendas y oficinas cierran, unas por voluntad propia, otras forzadas por los acontecimientos. En el mismo momento, en el Teatro del Liceu, se representa el ballet Don Quixote de Ludwig Minkus. En los dos días de huelga general, 32 estudiantes del Master en Documental de Creación de la Universitat Pompeu Fabra se lanzan a la calle con sus cámaras para registrar los hechos desde diferentes puntos de vista, siguiendo las indicaciones del director ruso Victor Kossakovsky. El resultado es un film-ballet en que los personajes, los sonidos y las situaciones encontrados se combinan con la música de Minkus en una mezcla reveladora que produce un efecto imprevisible. (extraído de docsbarcelona.com) (FILMAFFINITY)