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Gennady Shpalikov

Gennady Fyodorovich Shpalikov was a prominent Soviet Russian poet, screenwriter and film director.

Early years
Gennady was born in the town of Segezha, Karelian ASSR into a Russian family of military background. His father Fyodor Grigorievich Shpalikov came from peasants of the Orenburg Governorate; he finished the Kuibyshev Military Engineering Academy in Moscow and was assigned to build a pulp and paper enterprise in Segezha. In 1939 his family returned to Moscow. With the start of the Great Patriotic War they were evacuated to the Kirghiz SSR along with the Academy and remained there until 1943. Fyodor Shpalikov was sent to the front line; he received an Order of the Red Star in 1944 and was declared missing in action in Western Poland in 1945. Gennady was raised by his mother Ludmila Nikiforovna Perevertkina, also from peasants of the Voronezh Governorate. Her brother was an acclaimed Soviet colonel general Semyon Perevertkin who led the 79th Rifle Corps of the 3rd Shock Army during the fight for Reichstag and later served as a Deputy Director of the Ministry of Internal Affairs between 1956 and 1960. In 1947 Shpalikov himself was sent to study in Kiev's military cadet school which he finished in 1955. The same year he published his first poems. He then enrolled at the Moscow Military Commanders Training School, but was discharged after receiving a meniscus injury during the training in 1956. Shpalikov then successfully applied to the screenwriting faculty of VGIK which he finished in 1961. During the studies he met Andrei Tarkovsky and Andrei Konchalovsky who became his close friends. In 1959 he married Natalya Ryazantseva, another aspiring screenwriter (Wings, The Long Farewell, The Voice), but they divorced in just three years. ==Career==
Career
In 1960 Shpalikov, still a VGIK student, was offered to write a screenplay for the new film by Marlen Khutsiev. Originally titled Ilyich's Gate, the movie was dedicated to the Khrushchev Thaw and the new generation of the Sixtiers, being inspired by the French New Wave. Ryazantzeva, Tarkovsky and Konchalovsky all played small parts in it. A long episode that featured many popular poets of the time was filmed with the support of Yekaterina Furtseva who suggested to make it a two-part feature and raised the film's budget. Finished by the end of 1962, it was screened in the Moscow Kremlin in March 1963 to a grand scandal. Nikita Khrushchev compared the movie to ideological diversion, criticized it for ideas and norms of public and private life that are entirely unacceptable and alien to Soviet people and for showing young people wandering around the city doing nothing. It was suggested to rewrite the screenplay and cut down the movie, although Shpalikov protested and tried to avoid changing his script at every possibility, so the final reedited version of the film was released only in 1965 under the name of I Am Twenty, also to poor reviews. Only in 1988 the restored version was released under its original title, called a crucial big screen work of art of the early 1960s by the commission under the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR. In 1962 Georgiy Daneliya invited Shpalikov for a joint effort, and together they wrote a comedy film Walking the Streets of Moscow. Similar to Ilyich's Gate in tone and message, it seemed suspicious to the Artistic Council at first as they saw it as another movie about young people wandering around the city doing nothing. But after Daneliya assured one of the head officials at the State Committee for Cinematography that they had nothing tricky on their minds, the work became easy, fast and fun. Walking the Streets of Moscow was officially selected for the 1964 Cannes Film Festival. The term lyrical comedy often used to describe Soviet films was coined by the authors during their fight with the Artistic Council who couldn't understand why the comedy didn't make them laugh. Same happened to the 1971 drama You and Me by Larisa Shepitko: it was well received at the 32nd Venice International Film Festival, but failed miserably at the Soviet box office. In addition to screenwriting, Shpalikov was also a prominent poet and songwriter. Few of his poems were published during the lifetime, yet many of them found their way through bard songs and evenings of poetry. Sergey Nikitin wrote melodies for many of his poems. ==Death==
Death
Shpalikov was a heavy drinker according to both of his wives. By the start of the 1970s he had almost completely lost hope of finding a job, despite much unpublished material on his hands, including screenplays, poems and a big unfinished novel. Depression could be felt in his letters and diaries of that time. Gulaya, being worried for their daughter Daria Shpalikova (born 1963), decided to divorce him after all. In 2009 a monument was placed at the entrance to the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography showing Gennady Shpalikov, Andrei Tarkovsky and Vasily Shukshin together. According to Sergei Solovyov, these people defined the face of the national and world cinema during the second half of the 20th century. ==Selected filmography==
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