9 Rota Movie Free Download

Cinemanila International Film Festival 2006

Winner
Best Actor
International Competition
Aleksey Chadov
Nominee
Lino Brocka Award
International Competition
Fedor Bondarchuk

Golden Eagle Awards, Russia 2006

This movie was one of the innovational in 200Excellent music, great special effects. Now better stop looking for some other movies in Drama genre because one of the most exciting of them, 9 rota is right here!

Winner
Golden Eagle
Best Feature Film
Fedor Bondarchuk(director)
Elena Yatsura(producer)
Sergey Melkumov(producer)
Alexander Rodnyansky(producer)
Best Cinematography
Maksim Osadchiy-Korytkovskiy
Best Music
Dato Evgenidze
Best Sound
Kirill Vasilenko
Nominee
Golden Eagle
Best Director
Fedor Bondarchuk(director)
Art Pictures Studio(production company)
Best Actor
Mikhail Porechenkov
Best Screenplay
Yuriy Korotkov
Best Film Editing
Igor Litoninskiy

MTV Movie Awards, Russia 2006

Winner
MTV Movie Award
Best Actor
Aleksey Chadov(actor)
Best On-Screen Team
Breakthrough of the Year
Artur Smolyaninov(actor)
Best Fight
Nominee
MTV Movie Award
Best Soundtrack
Tokio(artists)
For the song 'Kto ya bez tebya'.
Best Film
Best Actor
Mikhail Porechenkov(actor)
Best Actress
Irina Rakhmanova(actress)
Best Comedic Performance
Aleksandr Lykov(actor)
Breakthrough of the Year
Konstantin Kryukov(actor)
Best Kiss
Best Action Sequence

Nika Awards 2006

Winner
Nika
Best Film
Fedor Bondarchuk(director)
Elena Yatsura(producer)
Sergey Melkumov(producer)
Alexander Rodnyansky(producer)
Slovo
Art Pictures Group
Channel 1+1
Matila Röhr Productions (MRP)
Best Music
Dato Evgenidze
Best Sound
Kirill Vasilenko
Nominee
Nika
Best Director
Fedor Bondarchuk
Discovery of the Year
Fedor Bondarchuk(director)
Best Actor
Artur Smolyaninov
Best Supporting Actor
Mikhail Porechenkov

Russian Guild of Film Critics 2005

Nominee
Golden Aries
Best Debut
Fedor Bondarchuk
Best Cinematography
Maksim Osadchiy-Korytkovskiy
Best Score
Dato Evgenidze
Best Supporting Actor
Mikhail Porechenkov

Russian National Movie Awards 2006

Nominee
Georges Award
Best Russian Movie

(Redirected from 9 Rota)
The 9th Company
Directed byFedor Bondarchuk
Produced byAlexander Rodnyansky
Yelena Yatsura
Sergey Melkumov
Written byYuri Korotkov
StarringFyodor Bondarchuk
Aleksei Chadov
Mikhail Evlanov
Music byDato Evgenidze
CinematographyMaksim Osadchy
Edited byIgor Litoninsky
Distributed byArt Pictures Group
Release date
Running time
130 minutes
CountryRussia
Ukraine
Finland
LanguageRussian
Budget$9,500,000
Box office$25,555,809

The 9th Company (Russian: 9 Рота) is a 2005 Russianwar film directed by Fedor Bondarchuk and set during the Soviet–Afghan War. The film is loosely based on a real-life battle that took place at Elevation 3234 in early 1988, during the last large-scale Soviet military operation (Magistral) in Afghanistan.

  • 4Release
9 rota

Plot[edit]

At a farewell ceremony in Krasnoyarsk, a band of young Soviet Army recruits is preparing for their departure to their place of military service. On arrival at their bootcamp in the Fergana Valley of Uzbekistan they meet their drill instructor, Senior Praporschik Dygalo, a seasoned, traumatized veteran of several tours in Afghanistan and a brutal trainer who treats the recruits harshly and at one time suffers a nervous breakdown. During their training, the recruits overcome their differences and build bonds. Between the training sessions, they receive lessons in operating plastic explosives (which prompts some comic relief) and how to conduct themselves in Afghanistan (underlining the vast cultural differences between Western and Afghan culture).

On their arrival at Baghram air base they greet a group of VDV troops who have fulfilled their military service and are due to return home. One of the departing soldiers gives one of the new arrivals, Lyutyi, a talisman that he claims has kept him safe through several tours and multiple firefights. Homeward bound, the departing soldier's transport plane is hit by enemy fire from the nearby mountains and crashes, giving the new recruits their first taste of war.

Shortly thereafter, the soldiers are assigned to the 9th company, where their trainer and drill instructor, Dygalo, had previously served. The company is soon deployed to the front as part of Operation Magistral and is instructed to hold a nameless hill at all costs. After some preliminary skirmishes, the company's position comes under sustained attack by a large number of Mujahedin fighters and is overrun. In the end, the company holds the hill until reinforcements arrive, by which time seemingly only Lyutyi is still alive.

Free

Historical parallel[edit]

In the film, only one soldier from the company is shown to have survived unscathed and the company is said to have been 'forgotten' by command because of the Soviet withdrawal. In reality, the 9th Company, 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment was pinned down under heavy fire on Hill 3234 from 7–8 January 1988. They managed to stop three attacks by an estimated 200-250 mujahideen. The company lost a total of 6 men and killed around 200 mujahideen. Another 28 out of the total 39 were seriously wounded. Four of the killed soldiers were posthumously awarded the golden star of the Hero of the Soviet Union. The unit was in constant communication with headquarters and received everything the regimental commander, Colonel Valery Vostrotin, could provide in terms of rations, ammunition, reinforcements, and helicopter evacuation of the wounded.[1]

Cast[edit]

  • Artur Smolyaninov as Private then Sergeant Oleg Lutaev (Lyutyy)
  • Aleksey Chadov as Private Volodya Vorobiev (Vorobey)
  • Konstantin Kryukov as Private Ruslan Petrovskyy (Dzhokonda)
  • Ivan Kokorin as Private Chugainov (Chugun)
  • Mikhail Evlanov as Private Ryabokon (Ryaba)
  • Artyom Mikhalkov as Private Stasenko (Stas)
  • Soslan Fidarov as Private Bigbulatov (Pinochet)
  • Ivan Nikolaev as Seryy
  • Mikhail Porechenkov as Senior Praporschik Alexandr Dygalo
  • Fedor Bondarchuk as Warrant Officer Pogrebnyak (Khokhol)
  • Dmitriy Mukhamadeev as Sergeant Afanasiev (Afanasiy)
  • Irina Rakhmanova as Belosnezhka (Snow White girl)
  • Amadu Mamadakov as Sergeant Kurbanhaliev (Kurbashi)
  • Aleksandr Shein as Patefon (as Aleksandr Sheyn)
  • Aleksei Kravchenko as Captain Bystrov
  • Aleksandr Bashirov as Pomidor
  • Mikhail Olegovich Yefremov as Veteran, who gives talisman
  • Stanislav Govorukhin as a training regiment commander
  • Andrey Kras ko as unknown Colonel in Afgan
  • Aleksandr Lykov as Major of combat engineers
  • Aleksey Serebryakov as Reconnaissance Captain
  • Oles Katsion as Mikhey
  • Karen Martirosyan as Ashot
  • Marat Gudiev as Akhmet
  • Denis Moshkin as 'Chernyy aist' ('the Black Stork')
  • Aleksandr Kucherenko as Barber
  • Svetlana Ivanova as Olya
  • Evgeniy Arutyunyan as Radioman
  • Mikhail Vladimirov as Tank driver
  • Mikhail Solodko as Military commissariat officer

Release[edit]

Critical reception[edit]

The film received a mixed reaction from the veterans of that war, who pointed to a number of inaccuracies, but nevertheless, judging by ticket sales, it was embraced by the general public and even by Russian PresidentVladimir Putin.[2] Although first released in 2005, and broadcast on TV in several nations, it was not released in the US until 2010 on DVD.

9 Rota Movie Free Download Free

Release dates:[3]

9 Rota Movie free. download full

  • Brazil 29 September 2005
  • Belarus 29 September 2005
  • Kazakhstan 29 September 2005
  • Russia 29 September 2005
  • Ukraine 29 September 2005
  • Estonia 14 October 2005
  • Finland 3 March 2006
  • France 20 May 2006 (Cannes Film Festival)
  • Sweden 11 October 2006 (DVD premiere)
  • Poland 12 October 2006 (Warsaw International FilmFest)
  • Poland 20 October 2006
  • Philippines 3 November 2006 (Cinemanila Film Festival)
  • UK 16 February 2007
  • France 17 February 2007 (TV premiere)
  • Argentina 18 June 2007 (DVD premiere)
  • Belgium 12 September 2007
  • Netherlands 26 February 2008 (DVD premiere)
  • Germany 26 August 2008
  • USA 31 August 2010 (DVD and Blu-ray Disc premiere)

Box office[edit]

The film was released in September 2005 and became a Russian box office hit, generating $7.7 million in its first five days of release alone, a new domestic record.[4]

Awards[edit]

In 2006, Russia selected the film as its candidate for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film nomination. It was also given the Golden Eagle Award for Best Feature Film by the Russian Academy of Cinema Arts.

See also[edit]

History
Films

References[edit]

  1. ^Schofield, The Russian Elite, Greenhill, 1993, pp. 120-125
  2. ^'Putin praise for Russian war film'. BBC News. 8 November 2005.
  3. ^IMDb
  4. ^'Afghanistan War Movie Breaks Russian Box Office Record'. Mosnews.com. 2005-10-05.[dead link]

External links[edit]

  • Official website(in Russian)
  • 9th Company at AllMovie
  • 9th Company on IMDb
  • 9th Company at Rotten Tomatoes
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_9th_Company&oldid=912616592'