Panfilov's 28 Men - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Panfilov's 28 Men"
28 панфиловцев (2016)
Timing: 1:45 (105 min)
Panfilov
6.78/10
175
Panfilov
7.655/10
232056
Panfilov
6.7/10
6600

Actors and characters

Photo Azamat Nigmanov #28433Photo Azamat Nigmanov #28434
Azamat Nigmanov
Character Musabek Sengirbaev
Photo Alexey Morozov #171352Photo Alexey Morozov #171353Photo Alexey Morozov #171354Photo Alexey Morozov #171355
Alexey Morozov
Character Vasiliy Klochkov
Photo Yakiv Kucherevskyi #273210
Yakiv Kucherevskyi
Character Serzhant Dobrobabin
Photo Oleg Fyodorov #273211Photo Oleg Fyodorov #273212
Oleg Fyodorov
Character Grigory Shemyakin, foreman
Photo Aleksej Longin #273213Photo Aleksej Longin #273214
Aleksej Longin
Character Pavel Gundilovich
Photo Dmitriy Girev #273215
Dmitriy Girev
Character Bondarenko
Photo Amadu Mamadakov #124921Photo Amadu Mamadakov #124922

Amadu Mamadakov

Amadu Mamadakov
Character Alikbay Kosaev
Photo Andrey Shalyopa #344291
Andrey Shalopa
Character Lieutenant
Photo Pavel Goncharov #273216
Pavel Goncharov
Character Natarov
Nikolay Klimchuk
Character Petrenko
Photo Vitaliy Kovalenko #273217Photo Vitaliy Kovalenko #344292
Vitaliy Kovalenko
Character Shepetkov
Photo Aleksandr Plaksin #273218
Aleksandr Plaksin
Character Kryuchkov
Photo Anton Filipenko #239910Photo Anton Filipenko #336051
Anton Filipenko
Character Timofeev
Photo Anton Kuznetsov #273219Photo Anton Kuznetsov #273220
Anton Kuznetsov
Character Fedor Ivanovich Reshetnikov, major, battalion commander
Photo Aziz Beyshenaliev #273221

Aziz Beyshenaliev

Aziz Beyshenaliev
Character Leitenant Bulatov

What's left behind the scenes

  • Almost all the tanks featured in the film are 1:16 scale models. A full-size tank interior model was built for filming inside the tanks. In addition, a full-size model of an entire tank was also constructed.
  • To enhance the realism of the tank models' movement, they were filmed at four times the speed, and the resulting footage was then slowed down. The camera was mounted on a robotic arm made by the German company KUKA.
  • Initially, funding for the film was raised through crowdfunding, ultimately collecting 34,746,062 rubles. Subsequently, the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation and the Ministry of Culture of Kazakhstan joined the film's financing. Gaijin Entertainment provided financial, organizational, and technical support at various stages of film production.
  • Due to the specifics of the crowdfunding budget, casting took a long time. The first actor to be confirmed was Yakov Kucherevsky, who played Sergeant Dobrobabin – he agreed to participate two years before filming. Alexei Morozov, for the role of Political Officer Klochkov, was the last to be confirmed – one day before the start of filming.
  • The Panfilov Division was formed in the Kazakh SSR, and the company included many Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, so a large number of actors of Eastern appearance were needed for the extras. Andrey Shalyopa’s team contacted national diasporas in Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Ivanovo. In total, the team consisted of 360 people, and up to 700 people were involved in the project overall.
  • Filming began on October 4, 2013, in the pavilions at Lenfilm. The main part of the filming took place in the winter of 2014/15, with winter scenes shot near Saint Petersburg and in Ivanovo.
  • The film featured both professional actors and amateur volunteers.
  • Artyom Kokin, head of the Leningrad-900 military history club, served as a military consultant.
  • For the filming of the first scenes, the director of the Karelian Isthmus Military Museum, Bair Irincheev, donated props and uniforms of Red Army soldiers free of charge. The Military Technical Museum in Chernogolovka also provided assistance with props.
  • The film was expected to receive state aid from Kazakhstan in the amount of $1 million. However, in January 2015, the Minister of Culture and Sports of Kazakhstan, Arystanbek Mukhamediuly, stated that the script did not meet the ministry's requirements and no cooperation would take place until the script was revised according to the ministry's instructions (according to media reports in Kazakhstan, one of the requirements was to include dialogue in the Kazakh language in the film). Subsequently, funds from Kazakhstan did arrive in the amount of 80 million tenge (approximately $287,000), and minor changes were made to the script. A quote from Baurzhan Momyshuly, a participant in the Battle of Moscow and a Kazakh writer, was placed at the beginning of the film, and a monument to the Panfilov Guardsmen in Almaty is shown in the end credits. The minister of culture explained the reduction in the amount compared to the originally stated sum as due to recent economic difficulties. He also reported technical assistance to the project and help in organizing extras.
  • The film was released in two versions during its premiere (in Russian and Kazakh).
  • The film premiered on the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Dubosekovo, on November 16th in the city of Volokolamsk, where the events depicted in the film unfolded.
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