Passion of Spies (Russian: Шпионские страсти, Shpionskiye strasti) is a 1967 Soyuzmultfilm's animated black-and-white film directed by Yefim Gamburg.[1] It parodies spy and detective fiction clichés[1] and got a status of a cult film.[2]

Passion of Spies
Directed byYefim Gamburg
Written byLazar Lagin
CinematographyMikhail Druyan
Music byGeorgiy Martynyuk
Production
company
Release date
  • 1967 (1967)
Running time
20 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Plot

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In Part 1, a foreign Intelligence agency chief Shtampf is suffering from a toothache. After learning about a wonderful, state-of-the-art dentist's chair invented in the Soviet Union, he develops a plan to steal it. His top agents pass information between each other, but Soviet agents catch them unaware, ending with a car chase where a musician-turned-chauffeur is injured. Part 2 tells the story of the chauffeur's idle son Kolychev, who tricks his parents out of money to attend a fancy restaurant. He is seduced by a foreign agent and tricked into buying a large bill, then convinced to plant a bomb beneath the dentist's chair in exchange for the bill being waived.

Animators

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  • Tatyana Pomerantseva[1]
  • Elvira Maslova
  • Ivan Davydov
  • Joseph Kuroyan
  • Renata Mirenkova
  • Olga Orlova
  • Dmitriy Anpilov
  • Natalia Bogomolova
  • Antonina Aleshina
  • Yuriy Butyrin

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Russian animation in letters and figures. Movies. Shpionskiye strasti" [Российская анимация в буквах и фигурах. Фильмы. "Шпионские страсти"] (in Russian). Animator.ru. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  2. ^ Королев, Роман (September 17, 2010). "Шпионские страсти", режиссер Ефим Гамбург, 1967. Forbes (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-12-31. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
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