Письма мёртвого человека (Letters from a Dead Man) 1986 PG
      When
3.30 pm, Sat 10 Mar 2018 (88 mins)Where
Gallery of Modern Art, Cinema A
About
A nuclear attack of tremendous proportions has devastated a city, which now resides under martial law. A professor hides out in the basement of a museum, sheltering from both the police and the fallout above ground. In his faltering refuge, he fruitlessly composes mental letters to his missing son and tries to find a path to hope for the children sharing the museum shelter.
Letters from a Dead Man offers a rare insight into the Soviet mindset during the Cold War – a counterpoint to the many American nuclear films that present the USSR as a faceless purveyor of destruction. It is also a brilliantly inventive sci-fi dystopia, crafting a brooding and vivid world wrought by nuclear calamity. Director Konstantin Lopushansky was an assistant to Andrei Tarkovsky on the set of Stalker 1979, and he brings a similar level of atmospheric control here through his stunningly rendered, tinted monochrome aesthetic.
Production Credits
- Director: Konstantin Lopushansky
 - Script: Konstantin Lopushansky, Vyacheslav Rybakov, Boris Strugatsky
 - Cinematographer: Nikolai Pokoptsev
 - Editor: T Poulinoi
 - Print Source: British Film Institute, London
 - Rights: Gosfilmofond
 - Year: 1986
 - Runtime: 87 minutes
 - Country: USSR
 - Language: Russian
 - Subtitles: English
 - Colour: Black & White, Colour
 - Shooting Format: 35mm
 - Screening Format: 35mm