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How I Ended This Summer

How I Ended This Summer (Russian: Как я провёл этим летом, translit. Kak ya provyol etim letom) is a 2010 Russian drama film directed by Alexei Popogrebski. It was critically acclaimed and garnered several awards and nominations; it was in the competition for the Golden Bear at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival.[1]

How I Ended This Summer
Film poster
Directed byAlexei Popogrebski
Written byAlexei Popogrebski
Produced byRoman Borisevich
Aleksandr Kushaev
StarringGrigoriy Dobrygin
Sergei Puskepalis
CinematographyPavel Kostomarov
Edited byIvan Lebedev
Music byDmitry Katkhanov
Production
companies
TV Channel Russia
Koktebel Film Company
Distributed byChannel One Russia (Russia)
Release dates
  • 17 February 2010 (2010-02-17) (Berlinale)
  • 1 April 2010 (2010-04-01) (Russia)
Running time
124 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Plot Edit

Meteorology student Pavel "Pasha" Danilov (Grigoriy Dobrygin) is spending the summer as an intern at an isolated, Soviet-era weather station on a remote Arctic island with only the older, experienced geophysicist Sergei Gulybin (Sergei Puskepalis) for company. Their sole job is to collect the weather and tide statistics every four hours on antiquated equipment, which they do in shifts, and report the readings by radio to the state meteorology center.

Sergei takes the boat on an unauthorized fishing trip for a few days, and tells Pasha not to mention this. When the radio operator urgently requests to speak with Sergei, Pasha dutifully makes up excuses why he cannot come on the radio. Eventually Pasha is told to take down a radiogram that Sergei's wife and young son have been "gravely injured" in an accident, although it is apparent they've been killed. He is told that a ship Academic Obruchev is headed to get them and instructed to simply give Sergei the message and then "leave him alone." The sad news keeps Pasha awake, but when he does sleep he oversleeps; the data goes unrecorded. Seeing Sergei's boat, he hastily grabs the logbook to fill in fake numbers, and in doing so knocks his radiogram under the desk. When Sergei comes ashore with the trout, he is in a good mood. He tells Pasha a warm story about his wife craving salted trout during her pregnancy. Pasha starts to say something, but Sergei interrupts and teaches him how to properly fillet a fish.

Once inside, Sergei quickly figures out that the Pasha made up the numbers in the log and explodes in anger, dragging Pasha inside and berating him. He tells him that the station has been continuously occupied since 1935, and that no matter how bad the conditions got, never had anyone just faked the numbers out of sheer laziness, and that now all their work is worthless. He accuses Pasha of being a "tourist" in the Arctic in order to write a pointless essay, "How I Ended This Summer" (a play on the clichéd "How I Spent My Summer Vacation.") Sergei tells him an intimidating story about the time one geophysicist apparently killed the other due to their strained relationship.

The frightened Pasha does not tell Sergei about his family and temporarily sabotages the radio. When Sergei leaves to get more trout, Pasha is told that the ship is stuck in ice, but that a helicopter will instead come before the weather worsens. Pasha, carrying a rifle, heads to the lagoon to meet the helicopter. Upon hearing the rotors of the helicopter, Pasha lights a flare, but the pilot cannot see the flare due to heavy fog and flies away. Pasha then notices bear pawprints. Following the tracks with his eyes, he sees the distinct white shape of a polar bear. He runs a short distance, and notices that the bear is chasing him. He flees, and begins to descend a steep embankment, and subsequently trips.

Pasha wakes up in Sergei's boat. As they disembark, Pasha tries to confess to Sergei that he needs to tell him something but Sergei ignores him. Pasha finally blurts out to Sergei that his family is dead. Sergei turns around and comes toward him, and Pasha, frightened and with an injured leg, falls to the ground. Thinking Sergei is going to attack him, Pasha fires at him but misses. He then gets up and runs away while Sergei picks up his gun and fires at him, and then keeps shooting into the air.

Pasha takes up residence in an old abandoned cabin. He wakes up to hear Sergei outside and hides, still afraid. Sergei calls to him and says he wants to talk to him. Sergei, who is carrying his rifle, hears Pasha step on something that makes a large cracking sound. Thinking Pasha fired at him, he fires his own rifle. The terrified Pasha runs away.

Pasha, freezing, huddles by an old radioisotope thermoelectric generator to keep warm before realizing he has exposed himself to radiation. He sneaks into the cabin when Sergei is away and tries to contact the main station for help but cannot reach anyone. Starving, he steals Sergei's fish and nearly chokes to death on a fishbone. He screams and curses Sergei. He hangs fish up on the isotope beacon; he later sneaks back into the cabin and replaces Sergei's stash of fish with the contaminated fish.

One night Sergei sees the disheveled Pasha looking in the cabin window watching him eat the fish. He signals to Pasha to come inside, and then invites him to sit down and have some fish. He says the Academic Obruchev made it through the ice after all and will be there in three days. Pasha confesses that the fish has been contaminated. Sergei says nothing, but goes to vomit up the fish he has just eaten. Pasha checks the cupboard and sees Sergei has eaten all of the contaminated fish. Sergei returns and says only that they don't have to tell anyone what has happened. 3 days later, two men help secure the broken thermoelectric generator to a helicopter, which then flies away to the Academic, which has reached the island.

Sergei tells Pasha he plans to stay on the island. Pasha threatens to tell what has happened to force Sergei to get medical help. Sergei grabs Pasha, and hugs him, telling him that he needs to stay on the island alone.[2]

Cast Edit

  • Grigoriy Dobrygin as Pavel Danilov
  • Sergei Puskepalis as Sergei Gulybin
  • Igor Csernyevics as Safronov (voice)
  • Ilya Sobolev as Volodya (voice)
  • Artyom Tsukanov as Stas (voice)

Production Edit

Conception Edit

Alexei Popogrebski stated in making the film, ever since he was a child, he has been fascinated by the diaries of polar explorers. Their ability to come to terms with the monstrous vastness of time and space amazes him. The story of two men living and working in complete isolation slowly developed inside of him over the years. After completing two features, Popogrebsky felt he was ready for this challenge.[3]

Filming Edit

The main location for filming was the Valkarkay polar station on the Chukchi Sea in Arctic Russia.[4] Alexei Popogrebski intended it was clear that the film had to merge entirely with the actual, real setting. He did some research and found the Valkarkai polar station on the northernmost tip of Chukotka. Popogrebsky states in his interview with the Russian Magazine: Action, “if you look at the map, it is literally the end of the world”.[3] Popograbsky and his team went there for location scouting in 2007 and fell in love with the place. When the group returned at the station in June, the ocean was still covered with ice; in the last days of filming it snowed and young ice began to form. It snowed for the first time on 3 August. The average temperature in these summer months was 5 degrees. The Foggy Station, where one of the most intense scenes of the film was shot, is located at the northernmost geographical point of mainland Chukotka - Cape Shelagsky. In total, five polar bears lived in the vicinity of the shooting site: the first appeared a bear with two adult bears, then a mother male (he was the one who "starred" in the film), and at the end of the shooting - a young bear who tried to have lunch with the director and cameraman. Throughout the film-making process, the film was shot chronologically, maximum jumping over one scene.[5]

Casting Edit

After Popogrebski came back from the location scouting, he proudly showed this place on the map to Sergey Puskepalis, who starred in his previous movie, Simple Things, and for whom he wrote one of the two parts in the new script. Puskepalis looked at it and then stated matter-of-factly: ‘I lived near there for nine years’. When Puskepalis was a child, his parents worked at a nuclear plant in Chukotka. Thanks to that, Sergey, who plays the seasoned polar meteorologist, fitted in entirely with the local workers from the very start. Popogrebski’s plan was for the actors to wear their protagonists’ clothes, live their lives, and follow their routine a hundred percent of the time.[3]

Themes Edit

The landscape and nature themself seems to become one of the main characters of this film, capturing landscapes that are striking but never aestheticised, from fog-steeped valleys to murderous rocky cliffs.[6] The film unfolds in the remotest Arctic regions of Russia's Far East, where the personal conflict between the film's two protagonists develops as they understand the nature of their different conflicts with the looming mountains and rough seascapes by which they are isolated.[7] As Popogrebski puts it himself, “All of us being city dwellers, we tell the story from the point of view of the younger character whose life experience is much closer to ours. However, in making this film, our effort was to become subjects to the nature of extreme North, to let go of rigid pre-planned concepts and be open and attentive to what it could offer us. And it had a lot to offer.”[8]

Another theme of this film is the generational divides of Russian society today. The film establishes its two-character dynamic, a story of two personal (and incompatible) time-and-space scaled, using a psychologically tense narrative to explore the relationship between linear historical time and timeless.The older character, Sergei (Sergei Puskipalis) relies on old methods of collecting and transmitting meteorological data. He records water and air temperatures and solar activity using what should be described as analogue methods: thermometers, barometers, as well as a pair of Wellington boots as he wades into the icy waters of the Arctic Ocean. His younger counterpart, Pavel (Grigorii Dobrygin), fully relies on modern digital technology—the computer. Perhaps in contemporary meteorological practice traditional and computerized methods are used conjointly; however, the director makes a clear point about the characters’ difference in the use of technology.[9]

Reception Edit

Critical response Edit

How I Ended This Summer received positive reviews overall. How I Ended This Summer has an approval rating of 79% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 43 reviews, and an average rating of 6.47/10.[10] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[11]

Critic Philip French of The Guardian praised the film, calling it a "tense allegory about modern Russia." He said Dobrygin and Puskepalis rightfully deserved their awards for their performances in the isolated setting, writing that "They almost seem like the last survivors in a post-apocalyptic world" and that he sees "Sergei and Pavel as representing different sides of Putin's Russia, one shaped by older traditional ways, the other struggling to discover a new set of values."[12] Tim Robey of The Daily Telegraph gave it four stars, writing, that the director Popogrebsky "delivers a Tarkovskian parable about nuclear horror which also functions as a sustained and nail-biting psychological thriller."[13]

Awards and nominations Edit

Awards Year Category Result Notes
Berlin International Film Festival[14] 2010 Silver Berlin Bear for Best Actor Won Gregorio Dobrygin/ Sergei Puskepalis
Silver Berlin Bear for Outstanding Artistic Achievement Won Pavel Kostomarov
BFI London Film Festival[15] 2010 Best Film (Film on the Square) Won
Chicago International Film Festival[16] 2010 Best Film (Gold Hugo) Won
Golden Eagle Awards[17] 2011 Best Screenplay Won
Best Cinematography Won
Best Feature Film Won
Best Director Nominated
Best Film Editing Nominated
Best Actor Nominated
Best Sound Nominated
Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival[18] 2010 Best Film Nominated
Asia Pacific Screen Awards[19] 2010 Best Actor Nominated Sergei Puskepalis
Russian Guild of Film Critics[20] 2011 Best Cinematographer (White Elephant) Won Pavel Kostomarov
Best Actor (White Elephant) Won С. Puskepalis/ G. Dobrygin
Best Film (White Elephant) Nominated
Best Screenplay (White Elephant) Nominated
Best Production Designer (White Elephant) Nominated
Best Director (White Elephant) Nominated
European Film Awards[21] 2010 European Cinematographer – Prix Carlo Di Palma Nominated Pavel Kostomarov

References Edit

  1. ^ "60th Berlin International Film Festival: Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  2. ^ "Review by Kirk Honeycutt". The Hollywood Reporter. 14 October 2010.
  3. ^ a b c "KINOGLAZ : How I Ended This Summer (Film)". www.kinoglaz.fr. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  4. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 March 2012.
  5. ^ "Съемочная группа фильма "Как я провел этим летом" представит свою работу журналистам". smotrim.ru. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  6. ^ Romney2010-02-17T23:35:00+00:00, Jonathan. "How I Ended This Summer (Kak Ya Provel Etim Letom)". Screen. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  7. ^ "How I Ended This Summer". theartsdesk.com. 18 April 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  8. ^ "How I Ended This Summer (2010/2011)". Covering Media. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  9. ^ "Ludic Digitality: A. Sokurov's Russian Ark and A. Popogrebskii's How I ended this summer as Cinegames". ResearchGate. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  10. ^ "How I Ended This Summer (2010)" – via www.rottentomatoes.com.
  11. ^ "How I Ended This Summer" – via www.metacritic.com.
  12. ^ French, Philip (23 April 2011). "How I Ended This Summer – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  13. ^ Robey, Tim (21 April 2011). "How I Ended This Summer, review". tf. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  14. ^ "Berlinale. Archive. Prize winners 2010".
  15. ^ . bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 31 October 2010. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 July 2011.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 July 2011.
  18. ^ . gaiff.am. Archived from the original on 2 May 2013. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  19. ^ "Sergei Puskepalis in How I Ended This Summer (Kak ya provel etim letom)". Asia Pacific Screen Awards. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  20. ^ "2010 | КиноПресса" (in Russian). Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  21. ^ "Archive - European Film Awards". europeanfilmawards.eu. Retrieved 16 May 2021.

External links Edit

ended, this, summer, russian, Как, провёл, этим, летом, translit, provyol, etim, letom, 2010, russian, drama, film, directed, alexei, popogrebski, critically, acclaimed, garnered, several, awards, nominations, competition, golden, bear, 60th, berlin, internati. How I Ended This Summer Russian Kak ya provyol etim letom translit Kak ya provyol etim letom is a 2010 Russian drama film directed by Alexei Popogrebski It was critically acclaimed and garnered several awards and nominations it was in the competition for the Golden Bear at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival 1 How I Ended This SummerFilm posterDirected byAlexei PopogrebskiWritten byAlexei PopogrebskiProduced byRoman Borisevich Aleksandr KushaevStarringGrigoriy Dobrygin Sergei PuskepalisCinematographyPavel KostomarovEdited byIvan LebedevMusic byDmitry KatkhanovProductioncompaniesTV Channel RussiaKoktebel Film CompanyDistributed byChannel One Russia Russia Release dates17 February 2010 2010 02 17 Berlinale 1 April 2010 2010 04 01 Russia Running time124 minutesCountryRussiaLanguageRussian Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Conception 3 2 Filming 3 3 Casting 4 Themes 5 Reception 5 1 Critical response 5 2 Awards and nominations 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditMeteorology student Pavel Pasha Danilov Grigoriy Dobrygin is spending the summer as an intern at an isolated Soviet era weather station on a remote Arctic island with only the older experienced geophysicist Sergei Gulybin Sergei Puskepalis for company Their sole job is to collect the weather and tide statistics every four hours on antiquated equipment which they do in shifts and report the readings by radio to the state meteorology center Sergei takes the boat on an unauthorized fishing trip for a few days and tells Pasha not to mention this When the radio operator urgently requests to speak with Sergei Pasha dutifully makes up excuses why he cannot come on the radio Eventually Pasha is told to take down a radiogram that Sergei s wife and young son have been gravely injured in an accident although it is apparent they ve been killed He is told that a ship Academic Obruchev is headed to get them and instructed to simply give Sergei the message and then leave him alone The sad news keeps Pasha awake but when he does sleep he oversleeps the data goes unrecorded Seeing Sergei s boat he hastily grabs the logbook to fill in fake numbers and in doing so knocks his radiogram under the desk When Sergei comes ashore with the trout he is in a good mood He tells Pasha a warm story about his wife craving salted trout during her pregnancy Pasha starts to say something but Sergei interrupts and teaches him how to properly fillet a fish Once inside Sergei quickly figures out that the Pasha made up the numbers in the log and explodes in anger dragging Pasha inside and berating him He tells him that the station has been continuously occupied since 1935 and that no matter how bad the conditions got never had anyone just faked the numbers out of sheer laziness and that now all their work is worthless He accuses Pasha of being a tourist in the Arctic in order to write a pointless essay How I Ended This Summer a play on the cliched How I Spent My Summer Vacation Sergei tells him an intimidating story about the time one geophysicist apparently killed the other due to their strained relationship The frightened Pasha does not tell Sergei about his family and temporarily sabotages the radio When Sergei leaves to get more trout Pasha is told that the ship is stuck in ice but that a helicopter will instead come before the weather worsens Pasha carrying a rifle heads to the lagoon to meet the helicopter Upon hearing the rotors of the helicopter Pasha lights a flare but the pilot cannot see the flare due to heavy fog and flies away Pasha then notices bear pawprints Following the tracks with his eyes he sees the distinct white shape of a polar bear He runs a short distance and notices that the bear is chasing him He flees and begins to descend a steep embankment and subsequently trips Pasha wakes up in Sergei s boat As they disembark Pasha tries to confess to Sergei that he needs to tell him something but Sergei ignores him Pasha finally blurts out to Sergei that his family is dead Sergei turns around and comes toward him and Pasha frightened and with an injured leg falls to the ground Thinking Sergei is going to attack him Pasha fires at him but misses He then gets up and runs away while Sergei picks up his gun and fires at him and then keeps shooting into the air Pasha takes up residence in an old abandoned cabin He wakes up to hear Sergei outside and hides still afraid Sergei calls to him and says he wants to talk to him Sergei who is carrying his rifle hears Pasha step on something that makes a large cracking sound Thinking Pasha fired at him he fires his own rifle The terrified Pasha runs away Pasha freezing huddles by an old radioisotope thermoelectric generator to keep warm before realizing he has exposed himself to radiation He sneaks into the cabin when Sergei is away and tries to contact the main station for help but cannot reach anyone Starving he steals Sergei s fish and nearly chokes to death on a fishbone He screams and curses Sergei He hangs fish up on the isotope beacon he later sneaks back into the cabin and replaces Sergei s stash of fish with the contaminated fish One night Sergei sees the disheveled Pasha looking in the cabin window watching him eat the fish He signals to Pasha to come inside and then invites him to sit down and have some fish He says the Academic Obruchev made it through the ice after all and will be there in three days Pasha confesses that the fish has been contaminated Sergei says nothing but goes to vomit up the fish he has just eaten Pasha checks the cupboard and sees Sergei has eaten all of the contaminated fish Sergei returns and says only that they don t have to tell anyone what has happened 3 days later two men help secure the broken thermoelectric generator to a helicopter which then flies away to the Academic which has reached the island Sergei tells Pasha he plans to stay on the island Pasha threatens to tell what has happened to force Sergei to get medical help Sergei grabs Pasha and hugs him telling him that he needs to stay on the island alone 2 Cast EditGrigoriy Dobrygin as Pavel Danilov Sergei Puskepalis as Sergei Gulybin Igor Csernyevics as Safronov voice Ilya Sobolev as Volodya voice Artyom Tsukanov as Stas voice Production EditConception Edit Alexei Popogrebski stated in making the film ever since he was a child he has been fascinated by the diaries of polar explorers Their ability to come to terms with the monstrous vastness of time and space amazes him The story of two men living and working in complete isolation slowly developed inside of him over the years After completing two features Popogrebsky felt he was ready for this challenge 3 Filming Edit The main location for filming was the Valkarkay polar station on the Chukchi Sea in Arctic Russia 4 Alexei Popogrebski intended it was clear that the film had to merge entirely with the actual real setting He did some research and found the Valkarkai polar station on the northernmost tip of Chukotka Popogrebsky states in his interview with the Russian Magazine Action if you look at the map it is literally the end of the world 3 Popograbsky and his team went there for location scouting in 2007 and fell in love with the place When the group returned at the station in June the ocean was still covered with ice in the last days of filming it snowed and young ice began to form It snowed for the first time on 3 August The average temperature in these summer months was 5 degrees The Foggy Station where one of the most intense scenes of the film was shot is located at the northernmost geographical point of mainland Chukotka Cape Shelagsky In total five polar bears lived in the vicinity of the shooting site the first appeared a bear with two adult bears then a mother male he was the one who starred in the film and at the end of the shooting a young bear who tried to have lunch with the director and cameraman Throughout the film making process the film was shot chronologically maximum jumping over one scene 5 Casting Edit After Popogrebski came back from the location scouting he proudly showed this place on the map to Sergey Puskepalis who starred in his previous movie Simple Things and for whom he wrote one of the two parts in the new script Puskepalis looked at it and then stated matter of factly I lived near there for nine years When Puskepalis was a child his parents worked at a nuclear plant in Chukotka Thanks to that Sergey who plays the seasoned polar meteorologist fitted in entirely with the local workers from the very start Popogrebski s plan was for the actors to wear their protagonists clothes live their lives and follow their routine a hundred percent of the time 3 Themes EditThe landscape and nature themself seems to become one of the main characters of this film capturing landscapes that are striking but never aestheticised from fog steeped valleys to murderous rocky cliffs 6 The film unfolds in the remotest Arctic regions of Russia s Far East where the personal conflict between the film s two protagonists develops as they understand the nature of their different conflicts with the looming mountains and rough seascapes by which they are isolated 7 As Popogrebski puts it himself All of us being city dwellers we tell the story from the point of view of the younger character whose life experience is much closer to ours However in making this film our effort was to become subjects to the nature of extreme North to let go of rigid pre planned concepts and be open and attentive to what it could offer us And it had a lot to offer 8 Another theme of this film is the generational divides of Russian society today The film establishes its two character dynamic a story of two personal and incompatible time and space scaled using a psychologically tense narrative to explore the relationship between linear historical time and timeless The older character Sergei Sergei Puskipalis relies on old methods of collecting and transmitting meteorological data He records water and air temperatures and solar activity using what should be described as analogue methods thermometers barometers as well as a pair of Wellington boots as he wades into the icy waters of the Arctic Ocean His younger counterpart Pavel Grigorii Dobrygin fully relies on modern digital technology the computer Perhaps in contemporary meteorological practice traditional and computerized methods are used conjointly however the director makes a clear point about the characters difference in the use of technology 9 Reception EditCritical response Edit How I Ended This Summer received positive reviews overall How I Ended This Summer has an approval rating of 79 on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on 43 reviews and an average rating of 6 47 10 10 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100 based on 6 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 11 Critic Philip French of The Guardian praised the film calling it a tense allegory about modern Russia He said Dobrygin and Puskepalis rightfully deserved their awards for their performances in the isolated setting writing that They almost seem like the last survivors in a post apocalyptic world and that he sees Sergei and Pavel as representing different sides of Putin s Russia one shaped by older traditional ways the other struggling to discover a new set of values 12 Tim Robey of The Daily Telegraph gave it four stars writing that the director Popogrebsky delivers a Tarkovskian parable about nuclear horror which also functions as a sustained and nail biting psychological thriller 13 Awards and nominations Edit Awards Year Category Result NotesBerlin International Film Festival 14 2010 Silver Berlin Bear for Best Actor Won Gregorio Dobrygin Sergei PuskepalisSilver Berlin Bear for Outstanding Artistic Achievement Won Pavel KostomarovBFI London Film Festival 15 2010 Best Film Film on the Square WonChicago International Film Festival 16 2010 Best Film Gold Hugo WonGolden Eagle Awards 17 2011 Best Screenplay WonBest Cinematography WonBest Feature Film WonBest Director NominatedBest Film Editing NominatedBest Actor NominatedBest Sound NominatedGolden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival 18 2010 Best Film NominatedAsia Pacific Screen Awards 19 2010 Best Actor Nominated Sergei PuskepalisRussian Guild of Film Critics 20 2011 Best Cinematographer White Elephant Won Pavel KostomarovBest Actor White Elephant Won S Puskepalis G DobryginBest Film White Elephant NominatedBest Screenplay White Elephant NominatedBest Production Designer White Elephant NominatedBest Director White Elephant NominatedEuropean Film Awards 21 2010 European Cinematographer Prix Carlo Di Palma Nominated Pavel KostomarovReferences Edit 60th Berlin International Film Festival Programme berlinale de Retrieved 16 October 2010 Review by Kirk Honeycutt The Hollywood Reporter 14 October 2010 a b c KINOGLAZ How I Ended This Summer Film www kinoglaz fr Retrieved 16 May 2021 How I Ended This Summer press book PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 March 2012 Semochnaya gruppa filma Kak ya provel etim letom predstavit svoyu rabotu zhurnalistam smotrim ru Retrieved 17 May 2021 Romney2010 02 17T23 35 00 00 00 Jonathan How I Ended This Summer Kak Ya Provel Etim Letom Screen Retrieved 19 May 2021 How I Ended This Summer theartsdesk com 18 April 2011 Retrieved 19 May 2021 How I Ended This Summer 2010 2011 Covering Media Retrieved 19 May 2021 Ludic Digitality A Sokurov s Russian Ark and A Popogrebskii s How I ended this summer as Cinegames ResearchGate Retrieved 19 May 2021 How I Ended This Summer 2010 via www rottentomatoes com How I Ended This Summer via www metacritic com French Philip 23 April 2011 How I Ended This Summer review The Guardian Retrieved 20 April 2015 Robey Tim 21 April 2011 How I Ended This Summer review tf Retrieved 20 April 2015 Berlinale Archive Prize winners 2010 Festival award winners announced bfi org uk Archived from the original on 31 October 2010 Retrieved 8 January 2011 46th Chicago International Film Festival Award Winners Announced Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 How I Ended This Summer Wins Top Golden Eagle Award Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Golden Apricot International Film Festival gaiff am Archived from the original on 2 May 2013 Retrieved 16 June 2011 Sergei Puskepalis in How I Ended This Summer Kak ya provel etim letom Asia Pacific Screen Awards Retrieved 15 May 2021 2010 KinoPressa in Russian Retrieved 16 May 2021 Archive European Film Awards europeanfilmawards eu Retrieved 16 May 2021 External links EditHow I Ended This Summer at IMDb How I Ended This Summer at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title How I Ended This Summer amp oldid 1180060823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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