Viktor Aristov

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1943-06-09

Deathday 1994-01-02 (50 years old)

Place of Birth Budyonnovka, Kirghiz SSR, USSR

Also Known As Виктор Аристов, Виктор Фёдорович Аристов, Viktor Fyodorovich Aristov

Viktor Aristov

Biography

Viktor Fyodorovich Aristov (Russian: Виктор Фёдорович Аристов; 9 June 1943 – 2 January 1994; Budyonnovka) was a Soviet film director and screenwriter. He directed five films between 1980 and 1994. His 1991 film Satan was entered into the 41st Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Silver Bear - Special Jury Prize. He was born on June 9, 1943 in the village of Budyonny of the Kyrgyz SSR. Prior to studying at the Institute, he worked as a stage driver at the Dzhambul Regional Drama Theater, a track worker at the tram and trolleybus department in Leningrad, a senior engineer at the A. Herzen Pedagogical Institute. In 1968, he graduated in absentia from the directing department of the Leningrad State Institute of Theater, Music and Cinematography (LGITMIK). As an assistant, he helped director Ilya Averbakh on the set of the film "Drama from Ancient Life", and as a second director he worked together with Alexey Herman, Sergei Mikaelyan, Joseph Heifitz. In addition, he starred in several films, including Kira Muratova in "Asthenic Syndrome" and "Learning the White World", Igor Maslennikov in "Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. Bloody inscription", by Sergey Snezhkin in "The Non-Returnee". In 1978, based on the story of Vasily Shukshin, he directed the short film "Brothers-in-Law", which was released only in 1987. In 1979, he wrote the script for the film by Dinara Asanova "The Wife is Gone". Fame came to director Viktor Aristov after the release of the film "Gunpowder". This work was awarded the Main Prize of the Leningrad Young Cinema Festival in 1987. Interest was also aroused by the director's new picture — "It's Difficult for the first hundred years", and Viktor Aristov's next work, the psychological thriller "Satan", shot by him according to his own script, won the Silver Bear prize at the 1991 Berlin Film Festival. While working on the film "Rains in the Ocean", the director died, and the shooting of this picture was completed by Yuri Mamin. He was buried at the Komarovsky cemetery (Komarovo village, St. Petersburg).

Known For

Director

1994
Rain in the Ocean

as Director

1991
Satan

as Director

1988
Love at First Sight

as Assistant Director

1987
The In-Laws

as Director

1985
Gunpowder

as Director

1984
My Friend Ivan Lapshin

as Second Unit Director

1980
A Twig in the Wind

as Director

1979
Married for the First Time

as Second Unit Director

1978
Jump From the Roof

as Second Unit Director

1976
Twenty Days Without War

as Assistant Director

1974
1971
Drama From the Old Life

as Assistant Director

1970
Stopwatch

as Assistant Director

Writer

1994
Rain in the Ocean

as Screenplay

1991
Satan

as Screenplay

1987
The In-Laws

as Screenplay

1985
Gunpowder

as Writer

1979
The Wife Has Left

as Screenplay