Piter

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Brother and sister Gorter made a variegated portrait of Piter, or St. Petersburg, through seven of its inhabitants. Poles apart in age, affluence and personality, their lives cross paths now and then. Elderly people like the 87-year-old Jelena Jakovlevna still live in the past; her apartment has furniture from before the communist revolution and still has a portrait of Stalin on the wall. To a young and successful publicity agent, the names Lenin and Stalin do not mean a whole lot anymore. A former party bigwig is now a thriving capitalist; an ex-journalist who thought the Brezhnev era would never end is on the breadline nowadays. The film, featuring Frank Gorter's striking music, meanwhile also shows life in the streets of St. Petersburg and the diverse interiors of the houses and workplaces of the seven Piter men and women.

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Writers

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Producers

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Budget

$0

Revenue

09-09-2004

Release Date

US

Country

8.5

Rating

2

Votes

-

Age Rating

79 min

Runtime

Released

Status

Russian

Language

Popular actors
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Director
Jessica Gorter

Jessica Gorter

Gorter studied filmmaking and editing at the Netherlands Film Academy in Amsterdam and has worked as an independent filmmaker ever since. In the winter of 1990, shortly after Gorbachev’s perestroika began in Russia, she traveled to Saint Petersburg and was seized by the silent revolution taking place there. This led to her first feature-length documentary Piter (2004), which was followed by 900 Days (2011). The latter, about the siege of Leningrad during World War II, won the IDFA Award for Best Dutch Documentary in 2011. Her latest film The Red Soul has been selected for both the Feature-Length Competition and the Dutch Competition at IDFA in 2017.
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