"Streets of broken lanterns" — 20 years: how the legendary series was created
Everyone knows about the series "Streets of Broken Lanterns" — this is such a Russian "Santa Barbara", an example of a popularly beloved epic and a truly culturally significant event in the world of the domestic film industry. "Cops" (video version title) without pathos, they told stories from life, truthfully and accurately — and that's why they loved and watched the series.
At the beginning of 2018, "Streets of Broken Lanterns", officially recognized as the longest Russian TV project, celebrated its 20th anniversary. Let's remember how this cult series was filmed.
Source: Cinema House
These titles of the series are recognizable in our country by millions of people. Over the course of 16 seasons, directors, screenwriters and actors have changed, but the love of the audience for the heroes of the series has always remained unchanged.
The introductory video to the TV series "Streets of broken lanterns" in 1998
The first series of "Streets of Broken Lanterns" was shown on TNT on January 4, 1998. Then the first season bought the ORT channel and put the series on the air in prime time from the beginning of October 1998. Ratings went through the roof.
The series tells about the working days of the 85th St. Petersburg police department. The main characters, ordinary "detectives" Casanova, Larin, Dukalis and Volkov restore order in the difficult nineties. They are not at all like those ideal policemen who were shown in Soviet films. These are simple guys, dressed modestly, travel around the city on public transport and conduct their investigations in shabby offices, often using illegal methods in their work — in a word, cops.
And although the television premiere of "Streets of Broken Lanterns" took place in 1998, the first "classic" eight episodes were filmed as early as 1995. Then the producer Alexander Kapitsa got into the hands of a book by the St. Petersburg writer Andrey Kivinov, whose sketches from the life of operas formed the basis of the script of the first series. Under the pseudonym of Kivinov, Andrei Pimenov, the captain of the homicide department of the Kirov police department of St. Petersburg, was hiding - one of the pioneers of the genre of ironic detective in Russia.
Writer and playwright Andrey Kivinov
Once he failed the exams for the Faculty of Literature, but the passion for writing remained. Working days were constantly throwing up plots, and in his spare time Pimenov wrote his first novel "A Nightmare on the Street of Strikes". A journalist friend read the story, said that his "Ilf and Petrov" appeared in the ranks of the police, and took the story to the publishing house. So the operative Andrey Pimenov became the writer and playwright Andrey Kivinov.
The first book by Kivinov, which formed the basis of the cult series
"A nightmare on the street of Strikes" got to the director of "Peculiarities of the National hunt" Alexander Rogozhkin, and he decided to contact the author and try to make a series about police everyday life. The series was first called "Cops", but in the process it seemed too straightforward, and the series came out as "Streets of Broken Lanterns".
The pilot series were filmed with naked enthusiasm: the actors were out of work, so they worked tirelessly. Director Alexander Rogozhkin brought Alexander Lykov (Casanova) and Sergey Selin (Dukalis). Alexey Nilov (Larin) left the chair of the head of the advertising department for the sake of filming, and Mikhail Trukhin (Volkov) came to the audition with a guitar, "sang a couple of thug songs and was approved for the role of a policeman."
Unknown to anyone at that time, the actors were themselves in the frame, "their own in the board", skinny and hungry against the background of nascent capitalism. They filmed, as they say, cheaply and angrily in "interiors" — in a real stronghold on shabby sofas in their clothes.
The images were colorful and memorable.
"Streets of Broken Lanterns" stirred the soul with its authentic atmosphere and lively types, but when Kivinov left the project, the series immediately lost its realism and individuality, and the creators began to fight for ratings without attracting more consultants in uniform. The vivacity of the characters left, the cops began to climb under the bullets, as if they were wearing an invisible bulletproof vest, the scripts dimmed, the humor was gone.