Early years Kachanov was born in 1921 in
Smolensk to a Jewish family. His mother was Haya Yakovlevna Kachanova; his father, Abel Mendelevich Kachanov, was a shoemaker. His mother died in 1932, when he was 11 years old. In spring 1939, Kachanov was called up for military service in the
Red Army in the town of
Chkalovsky, near Moscow. This deployment separated him permanently from his father and his only, older sister Maria (both were killed in Smolensk during the
Holocaust). After attending flying school in
Krasnoyarsk, Kachanov flew fighter planes as a
tail gunner. In 1940, the plane Kachanov was flying crashed. The pilot was killed; Kachanov was hospitalized with serious injuries. In spring 1941, Kachanov entered the
Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. From 1941 to 1945, he served in the
airborne forces as a parachute instructor and took part in special operations behind enemy lines. In 1945, due to Kachanov's war service he was promoted to sergeant. Even before demobilization in 1946, he decided to work in cinema and transferred to service at the Ministry of Defence studio in the Bolshevo.
Career After demobilization, Kachanov went to
Soyuzmultfilm and studied animation. From 1947 to 1957 he worked as animator, assistant director and production designer for film directors and animators of the older generation: Dmitry Babichenko, Valentina and Zinaida Brumberg,
Lev Atamanov,
Ivan Ivanov-Vano and Vladimir Polkovnikov (whom Kachanov regarded as his
directing mentor).
The Mitten In 1967 Kachanov's animated film,
The Mitten, received widespread international and domestic recognition. It became a 20th-century international animation classic.
Trilogy: Gena the Crocodile, Cheburashka and Shapoklyak These three films (and a fourth, 1983's
Cheburashka Goes to School) created the animated characters of
Cheburashka,
Crocodile Gena and
old woman Shapoklyak, who entered Russian culture and are still referenced in audiovisual, pop-cultural and folkloric works.
The Mystery of the Third Planet The animated cult SF film is based on a story by
Kir Bulychov, "Alice's Journey". ==Selected filmography==