Going Vertical

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Going Vertical
Three Seconds
File:Going Vertical.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Anton Megerdichev
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Leonid Vereshchagin
  • Anton Zlatopolsky
  • Nikita Mikhalkov
  • Vladimir Vasiliev
  • Aleksey Dubinin
  • Yekaterina Yakovleva
  • Sergei Gurevich
  • Aleksandr Utkin
Screenplay by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Nikolay Kulikov
  • Andrey Kureychik
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Cinematography Igor Grinyakin
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Petr Zelenov
  • Anton Megerdichev
  • Vazgen Kagramanyan
Production
company
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Distributed by Central Partnership
Release dates
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  • 28 December 2017 (2017-12-28) (Russia)
Running time
133 minutes
Country Russia
Language Russian
English
Budget $11.5 million
Box office $66.3 million

Going Vertical, also known as Three Seconds (Russian: Движение вверх), is a 2017 Russian sports drama film directed by Anton Megerdichev about the victory of the Soviet national basketball team over the 1972 U.S. Olympic team, ending their 63-game winning streak, at the Munich Summer Olympic's men's basketball tournament.

Upon its release on December 28, 2017, Going Vertical achieved critical and commercial success. With a worldwide gross of $66.3 million, Going Vertical was the highest-grossing modern Russian film of all time at the time of release.

Plot

The year was 1970. The senior men's Soviet Union national basketball team had changed its head coach. The team's new head coach, Vladimir Garanzhin (Vladimir Kondrashin), who was also the head coach of the Leningrad based BC Spartak basketball club, of the USSR Premier League; said at a press conference that at the Munich Summer Olympic Games, the Soviet Union was going to beat the U.S. men's national basketball team. The statements of the coach frightened Soviet sports officials, for whom their main goal was to perform strongly at the world's biggest sporting stage, in the year of the 50th anniversary of the Soviet Union, and keep their posts.

Vladimir Garanzhin completely changed the composition of the Soviet team, and it was no longer dominated by CSKA Moscow players, but instead the players from several different clubs of the country. Garanzhin also began training the team with new coaching techniques; he needed to inspire the team, and convince the players that they could beat the American team.

It was the night of 9 to 10 September 1972. The city of Munich, which had survived a terrorist attack three days earlier, had continued to host sports competitions at the Summer Olympic Games. The long-awaited finale of the XX Olympic Summer Basketball Tournament had finally arrived. The two final teams, as had been predicted by Garanzhin, were the USSR and U.S. teams. Up to the decisive game, both teams were unbeaten. And the outcome of the dramatic final match was decided in the last three seconds of the game...

Cast

Actors Summer Olympic Games
Vladimir Mashkov Vladimir Garanzhin, head coach of the USSR national basketball team, re-named
Viktoriya Tolstoganova Evgenia Garanzhina, wife of Vladimir Garanzhin
Nikita Yakovlev Shurka, son of Vladimir Garanzhin
Andrey Smolyakov Grigorii Moiseev, assistant head coach of the USSR team
Sergei Garmash Sergei Pavlov, Chairman of the State Committee for Sport of the USSR
Marat Basharov Gennadii Tereshenko, functionary, member of the USSR State Committee for Sports
James Tratas Modestas Paulauskas, captain of the USSR national basketball team (№5)
Irakli Mikava Zurab Sakandelidze, player of the USSR national basketball team (№6)
Aleksandr Ryapolov Alzhan Zharmukhamedov, player of the USSR national basketball team (№7)
Egor Klimovich Aleksandr Boloshev, player of the USSR national basketball team (№8)
Kuzma Saprykin Ivan Edeshko, player of the USSR national basketball team (№9)
Kirill Zaytsev Sergei Belov, player of the USSR national basketball team (№10)
Otar Lortkipanidze Mikhail Korkia, player of the USSR national basketball team (№11)
Ivan Kolesnikov (ru) Alexander Belov, player of the USSR national basketball team (№14)
Ivan Orlov Sergei Kovalenko, player of the USSR national basketball team (№15)
Alexandra Revenko Alexandra Ovchinnikova, the bride of Alexander Belov
John Savage Henry "Hank" Iba
Jay Bowdy Mike Bantom
Oliver Morton Doug Collins
Sheila M. Lockhart African American Pedestrian
Chidi Ajufo Jim Brewer
Andrius Paulavicius Jonas
Isaiah Jarel Jimmy
Konstantin Shpakov Tony Jameson, American basketball player
Aleksandr Gromov basketball player
Daniil Soldatov Mike, reporter
Oleg Lebedev Ranko Žeravica, coach of the Yugoslav national team
Aleksey Malashkin Aleksandr Gomelsky, coach of the USSR men's basketball team
Nataliya Kurdyubova Nina Yeryomina, a Soviet sports commentator
Kibwe Trim Dwight Jones, an American basketball player

Production

Even before the release of the film, it aroused sharp criticism from Yevgenia Kondrashina and Alexandra Ovchinnikova (widows of Vladimir Kondrashin and Alexander Belov), and Yuri Kondrashin (son of Vladimir Petrovich). In their opinion, the authors of the film plunged into their private lives, and included information about it in the script without their consent.

Filming

Principal photography began in August 2016, in Moscow.

The last scenes of the film - the scenes of the final match of the 1972 Olympic Games basketball tournament, between the USSR and the US national teams - were filmed in the first filming days.[1] Instead of filming a crowd of fans, advertising, and other attributes of the Munich match, the shooting technique used the "chromakey" technology.

Reception

The film received positive feedback from Russian media, but critics such as BadComedian were highly critical of the film.

In a two-hour critical response,[2] he accused the filmmakers of plagiarizing the 2004 American film Miracle and scathed at numerous, glaring historical inaccuracies (which attracted lawsuits from the families of some of the players portrayed in the film) as well as the tendency to subtly weave political views and messages into the film; for example, turning Modestas Paulauskas, an avid pro-Soviet player, into an anti-Soviet dissident under watch by the KGB. BadComedian also scathed the plot, suggesting that it had a total lack of any logic and was made solely to arouse emotions in viewers. Following the publication, Going Vertical rapidly dropped out of the top-10 Russian movies on Kinopoisk and BadComedian's response to it, which gathered more views than the film itself (32 million), was praised by the families of some of the players shown in the film.[3][4][5]

Box office

According to the United Federal Automated Information System on Movie Screenings in Cinema Halls (UAIS), the gross of the film, as of 2018, amounted to more than 2.9 billion[6] ($54 million), making the picture the higgest-grossing film in the history of modern Russian film distribution (post-Soviet era).[7][8][9][10]

It also became the highest-grossing Russian film in China, where it grossed CN¥85 million ($12.3 million).[11] That brought the film's worldwide gross to $66.3 million.

See also

References

External links

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