Born on 19 March 1924 (according to other sources including his tomb, on 19 August 1923) in
Tiflis,
Transcaucasian SFSR. His father Aleksandr Nikolayevich Kulidzhanov (originally Kulidzhanyan) was an
Armenian revolutionary who served as a high-ranking Communist Party official. He was arrested during the
Great Purge of 1937 and disappeared without a trace. Kulidzhanov's mother Yekaterina Dmitriyevna was either of
Russian or of Armenian descent. She was arrested along with her husband and sentenced to five years in the
Akmol labor camp in
Kazakhstan. She returned home only in 1944. All those years Kulidzhanov spent with his grandmother Tamara Nikolaevna. From 1942 to 1943 he studied at the
Tbilisi State University. In 1944 he traveled to Moscow and enrolled in the
All-Union State Institute of Cinematography to study film direction under
Grigori Kozintsev, but left it in just a year because of the poor living conditions and returned to Tbilisi. In 1948 Kulidzhanov became a VGIK student again, with
Sergei Gerasimov and
Tamara Makarova as his teachers. He graduated in 1955 and immediately started working at the
Gorky Film Studio, releasing his first short film
Ladies co-directed with
Genrikh Oganisyan. His first success happened with a movie
The House I Live In co-directed with
Yakov Segel. It became one of the 1957 Soviet box office leaders, reaching the 9th place with 28.9 million viewers. Not only it was the first cinema role of the acclaimed Russian actress
Zhanna Bolotova, but Kulidzhanov himself also played one of the characters. It was his only big screen role in the entire career. His next film
A Home for Tanya turned to be another success and competed for the
Palme d'Or at the
1959 Cannes Film Festival. But his real breakthrough happened with the 1961 drama film
When the Trees Were Tall that introduced such actors as
Yuri Nikulin,
Inna Gulaya,
Lyudmila Chursina and
Leonid Kuravlyov in their first serious roles. While not as successful with Soviet viewers at the time of release, it turned into a cult classic with years. In 1962 it was also selected for the
1962 Cannes Film Festival. In 1969 Kulidzhanov directed the first
Soviet adaptation of the
Crime and Punishment novel with many acclaimed Soviet actors involved. Although it failed at the box office and left some of his colleagues unimpressed (like
Andrei Tarkovsky who also dreamed of adapting the novel), it was praised by critics and intelligentsia. The movie was officially selected for the
31st Venice International Film Festival, and the filming crew was awarded with the
Vasilyev Brothers State Prize of the RSFSR in 1971. In 1965 Kulidzhanov was elected as the head of the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR, substituting
Ivan Pyryev at this post. As the head of the Union he helped to preserve a lot of films, founded the Cinema Museum and saved the archive of
Sergei Eisenstein. He held this position for 20 years straight, up till the scandalous 5th Congress of the Soviet Filmmakers in 1986 when a group of activists (presumably encouraged by
Alexander Yakovlev) started booing the lecturers, accusing Kulidzhanov and other leading directors of «nepotism» and «political conformism» and demanding a reelection of the whole board. All this led to a split, restructuring and a quick demise of the Soviet cinema. After Kulidzhanov left the Union, he wasn't able to direct anything up until the 1990s when he made his two final films. Both of them symbolized a return to his earlier days of film making and were written by his wife Natalia Anatolyevna Fokina (born 1927), a professional screenwriter whom he met during the 1940s. They had two sons: Aleksandr (born 1950, died 2018), a cinematographer, and Sergei (born 1957), a historian. Kulidzhanov died on 17 February 2002 and was buried in Moscow at the
Kuntsevo Cemetery. ==Filmography==