The Rifleman of the Voroshilov Regiment

The Rifleman of the Voroshilov Regiment
Directed by Stanislav Govorukhin
Produced by Yevgeni Golynsky
Written by Aleksandr Borodyanskiy
Stanislav Govorukhin
Yuri Polyakov
Viktor Pronin
Starring Mikhail Ulyanov
Anna Sinyakina
Aleksandr Porokhovshchikov
Cinematography Gennadi Engstrem
Edited by Vera Kruglova
Release dates
  • 1999
Running time
99 minutes
Country Russia
Language Russian

The Rifleman of the Voroshilov Regiment (Russian: Ворошиловский стрелок, translit. Voroshilovskiy strelok) is a 1999 Russian action and drama film directed by Stanislav Govorukhin based on the book Woman on Wednesdays (Russian: Женщина по средам translit. Zhenshchina po sredam) by Viktor Pronin. The concept loosely resembles the Rape and Revenge genre.

Plot

In the late 1990s, a World War II veteran, Ivan Afonin, lives with his granddaughter Katya. In a nearby flat, three bored unemployed youth, Vadim Pashutin, Boris Chukhanov and Igor Zvorygin, kill time by designating Wednesdays as a day of sexual gratification. They manage to lure Katya to their flat and rape her. Initially the offenders are arrested, however Vadim's father is a senior figure in the police and uses his influence to have the charges against his son and his friends dropped.

Frustrated at the offenders having escaped justice, Ivan sells his dacha and buys a silenced SVD sniper rifle from an illegal weapons trader. He obtains the keys to a flat directly in front of and overlooking the offenders´ flat and enters it when his neighbour is absent. From there he begins to administer vigilante justice. Taking care not to kill the offenders, he instead cripples them. First, he shoots Zvorygin's genitals (which contradicts the book, where he shot the student's leg). Secondly, he ignites Chukhanov's car by shooting the gas tank: although Chukhanov survives, the lower half of his body is severely burnt.

Vadim's father figures out that Ivan must be behind both accidents, ordering the search of Ivan's house and the second flat. However, police find nothing (Alexei, the local police watcher, had found and hid the rifle in his own house a day before that). Still, the father threatens Ivan, saying that should anything happen to his son, he will face severe consequences. Ivan interrupts him, saying that something has already happened (meaning that Vadim becoming a rapist clearly shows something has happened to him.) The father, however, takes his words literally, and rushes home, shooting out the door lock to open it (not knowing paranoid Vadim has barricaded the door.) Following the shot, Vadim shoots back through the door, wounding his father and, after days of fright, losing his sanity.

In the epilogue, Ivan finds Katya (not knowing anything of Vadim's fate) back at home, as she recovers completely. Alexei tells Ivan of the hidden rifle and unofficially confiscates it.

Reactions

The film proved controversial, with some film critics describing it as "a call to violence." [1]

Several subsequent real life cases have been compared to the film.[2][3]

References

External links