Presenter refuses to reveal MTV Russia film winner

April 30th, 2007
social poster
Car Choice: It’s my Stag party »

Stephen Mohan has a Morgan 4/4 (that’s a four-seater), which was built in 1978. The car covers about 200 miles a week in commuting to work. It’s fun, eccentric and popular with his two young sons. It is also low-maintenance, with its aluminium body and Cortina engine. However, the roof takes an age to put on, so he takes it off in May and puts it back on in October (often getting wet in the intervening months). The heater is almost irrelevant in cold weather, the lights aren’t...

Scandal hit MTV Russia’s movie awards ceremony when a presenter refused to announce the viewer-voted award for best movie after realising which film had won.

Vladimir Menshov, one of Russia’s leading directors, was onstage at Moscow’s Pushkin Theatre when he opened the envelope with details of the winning film - the World War II drama Svolochi, in which a group of teenage criminals is sent on a suicide mission behind German lines.

Mr Menshov gasped as he read the contents of the envelope, looked up and said: “I’m not going to hand over an award to a film that discredits my country, let Pamela Anderson (another of the evening’s presenters) do it instead”.

He then turned, dropped the envelope and stalked offstage, refusing to comment further. MTV Russia broadcast the ceremony live.

The film, directed by Alexander Atanesyan, tells the supposedly true story of a group of teenage convicts given the choice by the Soviet high command to serve severe sentences or cleanse their past crimes in a highly dangerous guerrilla mission.

It provoked a storm of controversy when it was released last year in Russia.

Russian military and security bodies were horrified by claims the story was true.

The Federal Security Service, successor to the KGB, said no such mission ever took place, and war veterans condemned it as an insult to the memory and sacrifice of real Red Army heroes.

But audiences, particularly the movie’s core teenage audience, flocked to see the film, with a title that translates to “bastards”.

It proved to be a springboard to success for a young cast of unknowns who were subsequently flooded with film and TV offers.

After the awards ceremony, Atanesyan told reporters that Menshov’s reaction had left him unmoved.

“Menshov has the right to his opinions about film and he used that right,” Atanesyan said.

The next day, MTV spokesman Vladimir Smirnov said Menshov’s reaction had been totally spontaneous and “was not part of the scenario” planned by MTV.

“Vladimir Menshov offered his own point of view on Svolochi. We treat Vladimir - one of the most well-known Russian film directors - with great respect, as well as the MTV viewers who made their choice,” he said.

“They watched the film and liked it.”

- Reuters

« Business Briefs - Tuesday

The media conglomerate, which operates the HSN shopping network, Ticketmaster and CitySearch, said Q4 earnings rose 29% to 67 cents a share ex items, beating views by 14 cents. IAC/InterActiveCorp. () said revenue increased 8% to $1.82 bil, just shy of forecasts of $1.87 bil. The company said its search site Ask.com, which IAC wants so that it can tie together its various Internet assets, had especially strong growth in its revenue per query. Shares dipped 1.4% to 38.72. Bankrate jumps on record...

Comments are closed.