In 1976, Yuri Mamin made a life-changing decision. After leaving Lenconcert, he entered Lenfilm as a director's assistant on a film crew for Sergey Mikaelyan's movie "Victory Day" ("Widows"). The second director of the film was Viktor Aristov, Mamin's friend from the theater institute, who had already worked in film for 10 years. Mamin says that Aristov became for him like "
Virgil for
Dante who guided him through the unknown world of cinematography". After working as an assistant on a few movies, Mamin entered the two-year higher course for directors and screenwriters in
Moscow. In that year, three workshops were organized: one by
Eldar Ryazanov, who focused his workshop on screenwriting, one by
Georgi Daneliya and one by
Nikita Mikhalkov. In total, twelve students were enrolled in the group, including
Ivan Dykhovichny,
Vladimir Khotinenko, and Isaak Fridberg. At this time period, from 1979 till 1982, which became an important milestone in Soviet cinematography, the courses offered a uniquely eclectic curriculum that included philosophy lectures by
Merab Mamardashvili and history classes by
Natan Eidelman. Among other lecturers were the art critic P. Volkova and film directors
Alexander Mitta,
Leonid Trauberg and
Andrey Tarkovsky who left the USSR after a long period of participation as a teacher.
I Wish You Mamin's final coursework, which received the highest grade, was the film "Желаю Вам. Провинциальная сказка" ("I Wish You! A Provincial Tale"), based on a screenplay written by V. Leikin. Before starting an independent director career, Mamin also co-directed
Viktor Aristov film "Gunpowder", timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the World War II Victory.
The Holiday of Neptun In 1985, a meeting with the talented screenwriter
Vladimir Vardunas, a playwright whom Mamin compares to
Gogolian, had determined the fate of both cinematographers. The first collaborative satirical film of Mamin and Vardunas "Neptune’s Holiday" (1986) became immediate popular. Attendees at the Fifth Congress of Soviet Filmmakers and at writer and journalist conventions responded vigorously to Mamin's work, calling it "the first film of Perestroika". "Neptune’s Holiday" was honored with a number of professional film prizes, including the Golden Ducat award in Mannheim (1986) and the Charlie Chaplin Great Award in Gabrovo (1987).
Fountain Mamin's philosophical film
Fountain (1988), written by
Vladimir Vardunas, was unanimously chosen for first prize at the first International Film Festival "Golden Duke" in
Odesa. The judging panel, led by
Eldar Ryazanov, consisted of the satirist
Mikhail Zhvanetsky, journalist
Vitaly Korotich, composer
Nikita Bogoslovsky and artist
Ilya Glazunov. In 1989, Mamin won the Chaplin's Golden Cane Award for
Fountain in
Vevey, Switzerland, the second Chaplin award in
Gabrovo, Bulgaria, as well as numerous other awards at different international film festivals. The actors of the film - Viktor Mikhailov, Sergey Dreiden (Dontsov), Ivan Krivoruchko, Lyudmila Samokhvalova, Zhanna Kerimtaeva and Nina Usatova - won the prize for the best ensemble cast at the
"Constellation" (Sozvezdie) film festival.
Bakenbardy In 1990, Mamin released the film "Bakenbardy" ("SIDEBURNS"), written by V. Leikin, a brutal
Brechtian farce about a fanatical "
national-
Pushkinist" scholar and his clique, who were obsessed with nationalist ideas and the poetry of
Alexander Pushkin. This film was made in a time of rampant nationalism in Russia. "Bakenbardy" received the prestigious
FIPRESCI Award at the film festival in
San Sebastian, Spain.
Window to Paris "Window to Paris" (1993) is the most famous of Mamin's works, which remains highly popular in Russia. It combines elements of science fiction, romance and sharp social satire. While sharply criticizing demoralized Russian
nouveau riche and wannabe businessmen who humiliate the
intelligentsia, it is a romantic story about a Russian musician who discovers an interdimensional
portal and suddenly ends up in Paris together with his drunk roommates. In turn, a French woman, played by
Agnès Soral, ends up in decaying slums of
Saint Petersburg.
Rains in the Ocean In 1994, after the death of his friend, film director Viktor Aristov, Yuri Mamin completed Aristov's film "Rains in the Ocean". In that year the film received two awards at the film festival
Kinoshok for innovative directing and best actress.
Television shows Mamin's return to the stage was not caused by nostalgia, but by the inability to continue working in cinematography. The government had halted funding the creation of films, and private commercial firms did not support cinema. During this period, movies were shot on cheap, low-grade film, which by international standards would be considered trash. Because of this situation, Yuri Mamin moved to television at the end of 1994 and began hosting educational, humorous, musical and original TV programs such as "From Forte to Piano" and "Chameleon" for the channel
RTR, appreciated by artists and popular among the intelligentsia.
"Gorko!" In 1997 Mamin was approached by private investors to film a funny, non-satirical, entertaining comedy about weddings. Together with his closest associates, including Vladimir Vardunas and Arkady Tigai, they came up with a screenplay for a film consisting of ten funny short stories about brides. The film was released in theaters in 1998, and won the award for best comedy film at the festival "Window to Europe" in Vyborg, Russia.
Grim Tales From Russia From 2000 to 2003, Yuri Mamin's spirit of social activism was embodied in the independent satirical television series
Grim Tales From Russia, which was similar to the American series
X-Files, but projected into Russian reality. The producer of the series was Ali Telyakov, a young businessman who had previously worked with Yuri Mamin on other TV programs. The series
Grim Tales From Russia, which totaled eighteen episodes, was shown on the federal channel STS. The series was so radically different from the other projects on the channel that the management could not decide when the series should be shown. Finally, a "wise" solution was found: the series was aired at night when the majority of viewers were sleeping. However, the population in the Russian regions to the east of Moscow greatly appreciated the originality of
Grim Tales From Russia. The director said that multitudes of his fans kept pestering him during the following years asking for the full series. Finally, the Saint Petersburg company Bomba-Piter released the series on DVD in 2009, which immediately led to their appearance on file sharing websites.
Don't Think About White Monkeys In 2005, Yuri Mamin's wife, actress and producer Lyudmila Samokhvalova, and their daughter,
Katerina Ksenyeva, convinced the distinguished film director to return to the big screen. They found investors who supported his socially critical film "Don’t Think About White Monkeys," written together with Vladimir Vardunas and rendered into verse by the poet Vyacheslav Leikin. The film has a second name, given in the captions: "Chaldean Face." The financial support for the film was obtained slowly, with long breaks in between; the work stopped for months at a time on more than one occasion. For that reason, the director, as an experienced, skilled worker capable of fulfilling tasks within a tight schedule, had been working on this film for over three years. However, if not for the financial support of a few honorable people - successful Russian businessmen - the film would never have been finished. Nevertheless, it was completed in 2009 and was successfully shown at a number of film festivals. The film opened in limited release. Even before its release, the film was fiendishly stolen by criminals who produced infringing DVDs and distributed the film illegally on the Internet, thus causing great financial difficulties for the film's sales in Russia. Nevertheless, after having won two prestigious grand prizes at international film festivals in England and Morocco (Rabat), western distributors became interested in the film. It is slated to be dubbed into English by the famous British sound engineer Ray Gillon. Notably, it will be the first time in the history of cinema that a Russian film in verse will be translated poetically into English verse. The film premiered successfully in the United States (New York and Minneapolis), France, Portugal, Lithuania, Ukraine, Canada and Germany. The mystical ballad "Insomnia", sung in the film by the actress Katerina Ksenyeva, is very popular with its listeners. Yuri Mamin's film "Don’t Think About White Monkeys" won the first prize at the first ever online film festival, “Double 2”, organized by the Russian Gazette ("Rossiyskaya Gazeta"). During the festival, the competing films were watched in 56 countries all around the world, thus proving that a mindful and soulful film can, indeed, be victorious. ==Current work==