Roman Volobuev

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1977-07-30 (47 years old)

Place of Birth Moscow, USSR

Also Known As Роман Волобуев, Волобуев Роман, Роман Олегович Волобуев

Roman Volobuev

Biography

Roman Olegovich Volobuev (Russian: Роман Олегович Волобуев; born July 31, 1977; Moscow) is a Russian film and television director, screenwriter, producer, and former film critic. Volobuev is best known for his 8-year tenure as film reviewer at Afisha magazine and for writing and directing TV series The Last Minister and Just Imagine Things We Know. Born and raised in Moscow, Volobuev briefly worked as an investigative reporter at Obshaya Gazeta before starting to write film reviews for the Russian edition of Première magazine, Izvestia, Vedomosti and Iskusstvo Kino and in 2004 became a film section editor at Afisha. He also served as founding editor-in-chief of the short-lived Russian edition of Empire film magazine in 2007 and as deputy editor of GQ Russia in 2012. In 2013, Volobuev and his co-writer Lena Vanina developed a political comedy series Zavtra (Tomorrow) about Russian liberal opposition winning presidential election for an independent cable news station TV Rain. Only pilot episode was produced, since TV Rain ran into political and financial troubles and could no longer finance the show. Volobuev's debut feature film The Cold Front (2016) a chamber mystery drama shot in Normandy was met with mostly lukewarm reviews and failed at the Russian box-office. His second film a satirical action comedy Blokbaster (2017) fared much better with critics and received the Special Jury Prize at Kinotavr film festival, but was disowned by Volobuev after a public spat with producers over the final cut. He eventually found a mainstream success with the black political comedy TV series The Last Minister and a 4-part mini-series about Moscow media industry Just Imagine Things We Know both released in 2020. Volobuev also co-wrote a post-apocalyptic drama series Survivors (2021) and appeared as an actor in Valeriya Gai Germanika's Brief Guide To A Happy Life (2011), Boris Khlebnikov's Hot and Bothered (2015) and Konstantin Bogomolov's A Good Man (2020). Volobuev is highly critical of Russian authorities, once calling modern Russia "an authoritarian state with good Wi-Fi and a nice urban planning". He was a vocal supporter of Snow Revolution and has been detained during street protests in Moscow in 2012. In 2018, after the arrest of the fellow director Kirill Serebrennikov he publicly urged Russian filmmakers to stop applying for funding from Russia's Ministry of Culture. In 2022, Volobuev condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine and subsequently left Russia. In a manifesto published by Meduza he compared moral choices Russian filmmakers currently face to the ones German filmmakers faced under Hitler.

Known For

Director

2023
Riot Days

as Director

2022
Aurora

as Director

2020
The Last Minister

as Director

2020
Cursed Days

as Director

2017
Blockbuster

as Director

2016
The Cold Front

as Director

2015
Tomorrow

as Director

Writer

2023
The White List

as Screenplay

2022
Aurora

as Writer

2021
Survivors

as Writer

2020
2017
Blockbuster

as Writer

2017
The Passenger

as Screenplay

2016
The Cold Front

as Writer

2015
Tomorrow

as Writer

2015
Quest

as Writer

Editor

2023
Riot Days

as Editor

2023
The White List

as Editor

2017
Middleground

as Editor

2015
Tomorrow

as Editor

Creator

2022
Aurora

as Creator

2021
Survivors

as Creator

2020

Actor

2020
Just Imagine Things We Know

as former colleague

2020
The Last Minister

as Y, senior curator from the presidential administration

2015
Concerned

as Владимир Семёнов

2015

Producer

2023
The White List

as Co-Producer

2023
Riot Days

as Producer

2017
Middleground

as Producer