Natasha (2015 film)
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Deborah Marks
Sasha K. Gordon
Aidan Shipley
Lola Tash
Deanna Dezmari
| Natasha | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | David Bezmozgis |
| Written by | David Bezmozgis |
| Produced by | Bill Marks Deborah Marks |
| Starring | Alex Ozerov Sasha K. Gordon Aidan Shipley Lola Tash Deanna Dezmari |
| Cinematography | Guy Godfree |
| Edited by | Michelle Szemberg |
Production company | Natasha Films |
| Distributed by | Mongrel Media |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
| Country | Canada |
| Languages | English Russian |
| Box office | $8,325[1] |
Natasha is a Canadian drama film, which premiered in 2015 before being released in Canada in 2016 and in the United States in 2017. The film was written and directed by David Bezmozgis, based on the title story from his 2004 short story collection Natasha and Other Stories.[2]
Mark Berman, an idealistic Jewish Canadian teenager in Toronto is seduced into a torrid affair by the mysteriously appearing but extremely ruthless Natasha, the daughter of his uncle Fima's new Russian mail-order bride who has been living a double life as a sex worker since childhood.[3] Although the original short story took place in the 1980s, for the film Bezmozgis updated the temporal setting to the present day in order to explore the impact of contemporary technology, such as the internet, on the story.[4]
Cast
- Alex Ozerov as Mark Berman
- Sasha K. Gordon as Natasha
- Lola Tash as Jana
- Aidan Shipley as Rufus
- Deanna Dezmari as Bella
- Pavel Tsitrinel as Meyer
- Mila Kanev as Dora
- Alla Kadysh as Faina
- Igor Ovadis as Faina's uncle
- Sergiy Kotelenets as Gena
- John Mavro as Daniel
- Jonathan Purdon as older pool guy
- Grisha Pasternak as Vadim
- Joshua Teixeira as kid 1
- Kylon Howell as kid 2
Release
The film premiered at the Boston Jewish Film Festival in November 2015,[4] and was screened at several other film festivals before going into general commercial release in Canada in May 2016.[5]
Awards
The film garnered two Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 5th Canadian Screen Awards in 2017, for Best Actress (Gordon) and Best Adapted Screenplay (Bezmozgis).[6]