Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Night Watch

 
Movies:

Night Watch

 
  • Director: Timur Bekmambetov
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Action Thriller, Supernatural Thriller
  • Themes: Metamorphosis, Werewolves, Chosen One
  • Main Cast: Konstantin Khabensky, Vladimir Menshov, Valery Zolotukhin, Maria Poroshina, Galina Tyunina, Viktor Verzhbitsky
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: RU
  • Run Time: 116 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot



Two bands of warriors, one good and one evil, battle to keep the peace in Moscow in this cat's cradle thriller from Russia. In 1342, the Warriors of Light (led by Gesser, Lord of Light) and the Warriors of Darkness (led by Zavulon, General of Darkness) declare a truce under which each side will form a law enforcement team to monitor the other side's activities. The Warriors of Light, who enforce the powers of good, patrol the Night Watch, while the Warriors of Darkness, who openly embrace evil, staff the Day Watch. Each watch group also contains "Others," mortals with supernatural powers from both sides that include vampires, shapeshifters, witches, and the like. Prophecy suggests that one day, a Great One will surface and permanently extinguish the threat of an apocalyptic war between the two sides by upsetting the balance, lending greater power to either good or evil (depending on his or her choice) and thus determining the future of mankind forever.

In 1992, Night Watch member and Warrior of Light Anton Gordesky (Konstantin Khabensky) discovers he's an "other" amid a sting on a witch. Cut to twelve years later. In 2004, Anton still works the Night Watch, but now he's a vampiric warrior who drinks blood. One night, while on patrol, he rescues a young boy named Egor (Dima Martinov) from a handful of Dark Warriors, but in the process, he encounters Svetlana (Maria Poroshina), a woman who acts as a "funnel" -- a conduit for the powers of evil. Anton reflects on the prophecy regarding "The Great One," and begins to suspect that Svetlana and Egor may be harbingers of this fateful event. As the first installment in a Russian trilogy, Night Watch (aka Nochnoj Dozor) was a massive box-office success in its native Russia, and is followed by the second installment, Day Watch; it was released in the U.S. with a heavy prologue and epilogue, and animated subtitles that alternately scuttle across the screen, dissolve, shudder, and explode.

20th Century Fox not only purchased United States distribution rights for the film, but also announced plans for a Westernized remake. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Russian cinema could not have returned with a greater bang. Largely dormant since the fall of the Soviet Union, the Russian film industry received a huge goose of credibility with Night Watch, a relentlessly stylish vampire movie that proves that the vampire genre has not yet been sucked dry. But Timur Bekmambetov's film is not cutting edge merely for its music video kinetics; it boasts such a revolutionary concept for subtitle design, Russian audiences ought to rent the English DVD release just to get the full viewing experience. Impressively, the subtitles are treated as an active pictorial element in the gothic proceedings, as the English words sometimes appear typed out in bursts with the dialogue, other times dissolve into smoke, or quiver with a disturbance in the soundtrack. It all adds to an enthralling vampire story that's simple enough not to confuse most audiences, but enough of a labyrinth to please viewers thirsting for mythology. Bekmambetov's world posits an uneasy truce between daywalking and nightwalking vampires, imagining their age-old rivalry as naturally evolving into a modern-day bureaucratic impasse. This is an excellent jumping off point to witness the unraveling of that agreement, with vampires moving in and out of a middle plane of existence called "the gloom," ready to pounce. The exquisite details of the Night Watch world are too many to enumerate, but they include prophecies, shape shifters, telepathic mind control, large flocks of birds, swooping cameras, quick edits, and all the blood dripping from chins you could want. The film's effectiveness is all the more unlikely given the climate at the time of its release, when vampire movies had bombarded multiplexes like the 21st century's answer to Quentin Tarantino ripoffs. That Night Watch accomplishes what it does under such unique circumstances is a testament to its singularity. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Konstantin Khabensky - Anton Gorodetsky
  • Vladimir Menshov - Boris Gesser
  • Valery Zolotukhin - Kostya's Father
  • Maria Poroshina - Svetlana
  • Galina Tyunina - Olga
  • Viktor Verzhbitsky - Zavulon
Gosha Kytsenko - Ignat; Aleksei Chadov - Kostya; Zhanna Friske - Alisa; Ilya Larutenko - Andrei; Rimma Markova - Darya, Witch; Mariya Mironova - Irina; Dima Martynov - Egor; Alexei Maklakov - Semyon; Anna Dubrovskaya - Larissa; Nikolai Olyalin - Inquistor; Marina Ivanova; Alexandre Samoilenko - Bear; Konstantin Murzenko; Ilia Lagutenko - Andrei; Anna Sliu - Tiger Cub; Sergei Prikhodko - Peter; Igor Savochkin - Maxim Ivanovich; Yegor Dronov - Tolik; Dmitry Klokov; Dmitry Osetrov; Anatoly Gorin; Liudmila Aronova; Alexander Shchurok; Nikolai Kiselev; Vitia Ivanov; Polina Shchurok; Tatiana Shchankina; Alexander Kozlov; Igor Pismenny; Victoria Smirnova; Sergei Kalashnikov; Ekaterina Malikova; Vladik Anufriyev; Yura Yakovlev; Vania Popov; Liesha Kurochkin; Yarik Romashenko

Credit

Valery Viktorov - Art Director, Mukhtar Mirzakeyev - Art Director, Maxim Fesiun - Art Director, Andrei Golikov - Animator, Ekaterina Sokolova - Animator, Tury Tsilin - Animator, Dmitry Kozhin - Animator, Alexei Melnikov - Animator, Mikhail Yedelkin - Animator, Valentin Kudriavtsev - Animator, Tamara Odinstova - Casting, Alexander Vedernikov - Conductor, Ekaterina Diminskaya - Costume Designer, Alexander Gorokhov - First Assistant Director, Timur Bekmambetov - Director, Alexander Gorokhov - Second Unit Director, Eldar Salavatov - Second Unit Director, Felix Zelenskiy - Second Unit Director, Dmitri Kiselev - Editor, Alexsei Kublistki - Executive Producer, Varvara Avdyushko - Executive Producer, Ekaterina Zaletayeva - Location Manager, Elena Saprykina - Location Manager, Alexei Kublitsky - Line Producer, Varya Avdyushko - Line Producer, Sergei Kirillov - Lighting, Maxim Kalmykov - Lighting, Yuri Poteyenko - Composer (Music Score), Tikhon Khrennikov - Songwriter, Vyacheslav Dobrynin - Songwriter, Sergei Shnurov - Songwriter, V. D. Akulshin - Songwriter, Vladimir Krestovsky - Songwriter, Andrei Grozny - Songwriter, Sergei Shubin - Songwriter, Irina Morozova - Makeup, Natalya Bogdanova - Makeup, Galina Ustimenko - Makeup, Vara Yavdyushko - Production Designer, Sergei Trofimov - Cinematographer, Roman Boiko - Cinematographer, Valentin Fidorouk - Cinematographer, Vladimir Pushkariev - Cinematographer, Konstantin Ernst - Producer, Igor Bondarenko - Producer, Anatoly Maximov - Producer, Yulia Korpacheva - Singer, Sergei Karpenko - Sound/Sound Designer, Dmitry Tarasenko - Stunts, Konstantin Demakhin - Stunts, Sergei Gushchin - Stunts, Yury Barinov - Stunts, Alexei Sefin - Stunts, Eduard Bougaichuk - Stunts, Boris Karelin - Stunts, Ilia Karelin - Stunts, Andrei Shurdakov - Stunts, Alexei Vorobiev - Stunts, Igor Besov - Stunts, Alexei Buinov - Stunts, Sergei Zotkin - Stunts, Alexander Rakov - Stunts, Sergei Golubev - Stunts, Vitaly Seregin - Stunts, Ruslan Klemenov - Stunts, Prokhor Zikora - Stunts, Andrei Nikolayev - Stunts, Oleg Borisenko - Stunts, Eduard Fedashko - Stunts, Andrei Grigoriev - Stunts, Vladimir Yelin - Stunts, Vladimir Maliugin - Stunts, Alexei Potapov - Stunts, Mikhail Sladko - Stunts, Alexei Pashin - Stunts, Alexander Anshiutu - Stunts, Alexander Kuliamin - Stunts, Sergei Sholokhov - Stunts, Andrei Lepilin - Stunts, Timur Bekmambetov - Screenwriter, Laeta Kalogridis - Screenwriter, Sergei Luk'yanenko - Screenwriter, Elena Ivanova - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Maxim Shinkarenko - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Levan Kapanadze - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Andrei Abdurakipov - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Ruslan Gerasimenkov - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Vladimir Lezhchinsky - Visual Effects Supervisor, Victor Zuikov - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Alia Somova - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Elena Ivanova - First Assistant Camera, Nikolai Shishkov - First Assistant Camera, Vladislav Korolev - Grip, Andrei Popov - Grip, Igor Kirillov - Key Grip, Russian National Symphony Orchestra - Musical Performer, Nadezhda Chibisova - Musical Performer, Norik Basegian - Musical Performer, Alexandr Abramov - Sound Director, Nikolai Litvinov - Steadicam Operator, Alik Tagirov - Steadicam Operator, Alexander Gorokhov - Visual Effects Producer, Varya Avdyushko - Costume/Wardrobe, Vladimir Zharkikh - Dolly Grip, Dmitry Dubrovin - Dolly Grip, Alexei Smirnov - Electrician, Konstantin Mistakidi - Electrician, Alexei Ilyin - Electrician, Alexander Sinitsyn - Electrician, Vladislav Soldatkin - Electrician, Alexei Chugreyev - Electrician, Sergei Seliverstov - Electrician, Georgiy Babaev - Electrician, Sergey Figner - Foley Artist, Yulia Zabara Nesterova - Personal Assistant, Elena Kuzmina - Production Accountant, Ekaterina Agaltsova - Production Accountant, Irina Kasianova - Second Unit Costumer, Adelia Exanova - Second Unit Costumer, Pavel Perepelkin - Visual Effects, Sergei Luk'yanenko - Book Author, Svetlana Grachiova - Craft Service/Catering, Sergei Golovanov - Driver, Sergei Vishvikov - Driver, Vladimir Budanov - Driver, Igor Svirepov - Driver, Nikolai Ovsiannikov - Driver, Yaroslav Stepanov - Driver, Boris Maslov - Driver, Ivan Urishev - Driver, Anatoliy Krasheninnikov - Driver, Victor Zolotarev - Driver, Valery Eremin - Driver, Alexander Statouyev - Driver, Sergei Grishkin - Driver, Mikhail Gevorkian - Driver, Alexander Shmakov - Driver, Alexander Grebenkin - Driver, Gennady Konkov - Driver, Tuija Kotamaki - Negative Cutter, Alexander Sharov - Visual Effects Editor, Maria Sergiyenkova - Visual Effects Editor

Similar Movies

Star Wars; The Matrix; Underworld; Constantine; The Prophecy; Blade; Van Helsing; Bram Stoker's Dracula; Dark City; Ultraviolet; Jumper; Wanted
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Night Watch (2004 film)
Top
Night Watch

International poster for Night Watch
Directed by Timur Bekmambetov
Produced by Konstantin Ernst
Anatoli Maksimov
Written by Novel:
Sergei Lukyanenko
Screenplay:
Timur Bekmambetov
Laeta Kalogridis
(english adaptation)
Sergei Lukyanenko
Timur Bekmambetov
(original screenplay)
Starring Konstantin Khabensky
Mariya Poroshina
Music by Yuri Poteyenko
Distributed by Gemini Film
Fox Searchlight Pictures
Release date(s) Flag of Commonwealth of Independent States July 8, 2004
Flag of Spain September 2, 2005
Flag of the United Kingdom October 7, 2005
Flag of Australia October 11, 2005
Flag of the United States February 17, 2006
Running time 115 min.
Country  Russia
Language Russian (all versions)
English (int'l.-version voice-overs)
Budget US$4.2 million
Followed by Day Watch

Night Watch (Russian: Ночной дозор, Nochnoi dozor) is a 2004 Russian action fantasy horror film by the Kazakhstan-born film director Timur Bekmambetov. It is loosely based on the novel The Night Watch, and is the first part of a trilogy, followed by Day Watch and ending supposedly with Twilight Watch (although the rights for it were acquired by FOX, production has not been started yet).[1]

Contents

Plot

In the prologue, which is set in medieval times, humans with extra powers are called Others (Иные, иной; Inye, Inoy). The Others are proponents of either light or dark and confront each other to do battle. Gesser, lord of light, realizes that the two forces are evenly matched and both will be destroyed. In parley with Zavulon, general of dark, the two agree to a truce in which the light will form a Night Watch and the dark a Day Watch to maintain the balance before the coming of the Great One who will choose either Light or Dark and thereby bring one to prominence.

In modern Russia, when his wife leaves him for another man, Anton Gorodetsky (Russian: Антон Городецкий) goes to see an old woman who he believes will be able to bring her back. This woman tells him that his wife is pregnant by the other man and that she must be made to miscarry, because if she gives birth she will return to the other man. Anton accepts responsibility for this. The old woman prepares a drink involving Anton's blood which he drinks. The shot cuts to his wife telling the other man they have to split up. The old woman starts to recite an incantation to induce an abortion, and Anton's wife on a distant boat collapses and clutches at her womb. Just as the incantation is about to be complete, two figures become visible in the room, and a third appears at the door, who shapeshifts into a tiger, and restrains the old woman. They express surprise when Anton sees them and note that he must be an "other".

Twelve years later, Anton has become a member of the Night Watch along with the three figures. At Anton's request, Kostya, his neighbor, takes him to his father, a butcher, to procure blood for Anton to drink. The father does so reluctantly and notes after Anton leaves that the Night Watch only drink blood when they are hunting a vampire, which is what they both (Kostya and his father) are.

A twelve-year-old boy, Egor, is hearing "The Call" - a psychic call by a vampire who intends to feed. Anton tracks Yegor, being able to hear the call as he nears Yegor, thanks to the blood he drank. On the way he sees a blond woman with her hair flying about even though she is inside a subway train with no airflow.

Two vampires are about to feed on Egor when Anton arrives, and he is attacked by the male vampire, whom Anton can see only in a mirror. Anton wounds the female vampire, who hides. The other members of the Night Watch arrive and turn on special lights on their truck. Anton then picks up a mirror shard and directs the light from the truck towards the male vampire's chest, destroying him. A member of the Day Watch arrives and reveals that the daywatch are aware of the "murder" of one of their dark ones.

Anton is healed by Gesser who notes that he could have solved things more easily by entering into the Gloom - a shadow world only available for the Others. After Anton tells him about the woman in the subway, he reveals a legend about a virgin who was cursed and people and animals around her died or sickened, she was accompanied by a vortex of damnation. Either this virgin who has been reborn must die or they must find who cursed her. Gesser gives Anton an assistant called Olga in the shape of a stuffed owl. Anton refuses and laughs until he sees Gesser throw it out the window, whereupon it turns into a living owl that flies away.

At Anton's apartment, the owl arrives and shapeshifts into a woman. Kostya arrives and says he knows that Anton killed the vampire Dark Other. Anton and Olga track Egor to his home where they must enter the Gloom as Yegor is there hiding from the female vampire. The Gloom almost takes Egor, but a blood sacrifice from Anton distracts it enough for them to escape. Emerging from the Gloom, Anton sees a photo of Egor and his mother, Anton's wife of twelve years ago. Night Watch members Tiger and Bear arrive to protect Egor but they start kissing and the boy follows the call of the female vampire.

Anton and Olga go to a command and control center set up near the apartment of the woman, Svetlana, from the subway train. A vortex is over her apartment and bad things have been happening to those near her. There is a flashback to twelve years prior where Anton recalls hearing the nightwatch that rescued him from Daria, that she had lied to him and the boy was his son. Anton enters Svetlana's apartment and talks with her, whereby it is revealed that she cursed herself, meaning she is an Other. This revealed, the curse ends and the vortex disappears.

Egor escapes the grips of the female vampire and tries to save Anton's life after Zavulon enters from the roof. During a duel, Anton attempts to stab Zavulon, but Zavulon sidesteps the swipe just as Egor runs up. Zavulon stops Anton's momentum, both saving Egor's life and making it appear as if Anton were attempting to kill his son. Zavulon's assistant reads Anton's personal file aloud and hearing that Anton tried to kill him before he was born, Egor willingly turns to the Dark, much to the dismay of Anton.

Cast

Production

The film was the first big-budget Russian fantasy film and one of the first blockbusters made after the collapse of the Soviet film industry. The film was produced by Channel One, the government-owned TV channel, with a budget of US$4.2 million.[2] It was shot in a 1.85:1 aspect ratio.

Part of the challenge for such a big-budget fantasy film was creating hundreds of visual effects (VFX) shots to which a modern audience is accustomed. 16 Russian VFX studios and several freelancers were used, each chosen for their individual strengths. Many shots were created by different artists across different time zones, using the Internet to share data and images.[3]

Music

The movie contains several songs from rock bands, e.g. "Jack" by the Belarusian group TT-34. The song played in the credits of the international version of the movie is called "Shatter" and performend by the UK rock band Feeder. In the original Russian version it is a rap which summarizes the movie plot in a funny way.

Release and reception

After a first appearance at the Moscow Film Festival on June 27, 2004, it went on general cinema release across the CIS on July 8, 2004. The film was extremely successful, becoming the highest-grossing Russian release ever, grossing US$16.7 million in Russia alone, thus making more money in Russia than The Lord of the Rings. The sequel, Day Watch, was released across the CIS on January 1, 2006, with a third film in the works. There is also a TV series in production.

The film attracted the attention of Fox Searchlight Pictures, which paid $4 million to acquire the worldwide distribution rights (excluding Russia and the Baltic states) of Night Watch and its sequel Day Watch.[4][5]

Fox Searchlight also offered to finance the third part. As a consequence, the third part will be filmed in the United States, likely with other actors speaking English instead of Russian.[6]

International release

One year after the Russian release, the international distribution began. Other than a London premiere at the Odeon West End as part of the Frightfest horror film festival, that screened amid heavy security on August 28, 2005[7], the first European country outside CIS was Spain where it was released on September 2, 2005. By mid October it had been released in most European countries, and on February 17, 2006 it had a limited release in the United States, followed by a full release on March 3. By February 13, 2006 (i.e. before the U.S. release) it had grossed US$32 million.

Original English language poster for Night Watch

The "international version" of the film debuted in the United Kingdom. In the prologue and epilogue, the Russian voice-over has been dubbed in English, but for the rest of the film features stylized subtitles appearing in odd places around the screen, often animated to emphasise or complement the action. For example, in a scene in which Yegor is being called by a Dark vampire, he is in a pool and the camera is underwater. The caption appears as blood red text that dissolves as blood would in water. In another scene, as a character walks across the scene from left to right, the caption is revealed as his body crosses the screen. In addition, many of the scenes that were present in the Russian theatrical release were omitted, while, at the same time, some scenes were re-cut or added. The International version is shorter by 10 minutes. Overall, it helped to make the film's plot clearer than it was in the original theatrical version, though many purists[who?] argue that the deletions subtract from the film. The DVD was released in the UK on April 24, 2006. The zone 4 DVD had the option of either a Russian or an English audiotrack. Subtitles were simply plain white text at the bottom of the screen. The International version of both Night Watch and its sequel, Day Watch, are now available in HD on Vudu. The HDX encodes are based on the International release and retain the original Russian dialog track with the stylized subtitles. The original Russian "Director's Cut" of the film was released, apart from Russia, in some European countries on DVD by 20th Century FOX. The only difference of this version from the original Russian version is the absence of the opening credits.

"Nochnoi Bazar" Fun redub

In the year 2005, a release of a "fun redub" of the movie was released under the title "Nochnoi Bazar" ("Night Chat"). The project was initiated by the writer Sergei Lukyanenko as a nod to popular (illegal) fun redubs by "Goblin" (Dmitri Putchkov). However, this fun redub was made with full consent of the filmmakers and copyright holders and released on DVD by Channel One Russia. The script was written by the Russian comedian Alexander Bachilo, the song parodies were written and composed by Alexander Pushnoy. The narration was done by Alexander Volodarsky, a popular voiceover translator of pirated videoreleases in the Soviet Union.

Novel vs. film

The film primarily follows the events of first part ("Story One: Destiny") of the novel Night Watch, with two opening scenes added from later in the series. Although the movie had one of the biggest budgets in the history of Russian filmmaking, there were still restraints on its content, especially given the length of the original three-hundred page, three-part book. Some of the changes made were small and insignificant; others significantly altered the nature of the plot. So, the film doesn't precisely follow the contents of the book - rather, the blockbuster is composed of different episodes, found in both "Night Watch" and "Day Watch" books by Sergei Lukyanenko. In the film certain scenes were reassessed, the plot line (as a chain of episodes and logic links between them) has been significantly modified.

The subtitles of the English language version reflect some difference in translation: the "gloom" in the film is translated as "twilight" in the book; the name transliterated as "Yegor" in the film is transliterated as "Egor" in the book, and "Zavulon" in the movie is transliterated as "Zabulon" in the book.

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Night Watch (2004 film)" Read more

 

Mentioned in