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Night Watch (Nochnoj dozor) - Konstantin Khabensky, Vladimir Menshov, Mariya Poroshina, Timur Bekmambetov
Threat advisory: High - High risk of entertaining activities
Movie propaganda
All that stands between light and darkness is the Night Watch.
For as long as humanity has existed, there have been "Others" among us; Witches, Vampires and Shape-Shifters who are soldiers in the eternal war between Light and Dark.
Light Others protect mankind from Dark Others, who plague and torture humans.
Over 1000 years ago a truce was struck between Geser (Vladimir Menshov), Lord of the Light, and Zavulon (Viktor Verzhbitsky), General of Darkness. They agreed that no-one could be forced to good or evil, people must choose freely for themselves. To uphold this truce, each side established underground forces; the soldiers of the Light would be called Night Watch, making sure Dark Others obeyed the truce. And the soldiers of Darkness would be called Day Watch, to do the same.
Ancient prophecy foretells that one day the Great One will arrive who can end the threat of an apocalyptic battle between Light and Dark Others. That day has come, and the Great One, once he or she is identified, must choose whether to destroy the light within or battle the surrounding darkness. This choice will reveal mankind's destiny.
1992: Anton Gorodetsky (Konstantin Khabensky), a broken-hearted man, desperate to win back his fiancée, seeks out the black magic services of a witch. This Dark Other, about to use her magic for evil, is arrested by the Night Watch moments before for completing her spell. The cataclysmic event awakens Anton to discover that he is an Other. Now he must choose whether to become a protector of light or warrior of darkness.
Today: Somewhere on the streets of Moscow the "Great One" wanders, oblivious to his or her powers. Anton, along with his Night Watch team, race to find and protect the Great One from Zavulon and his Day Watch vampires who seek to plunge the world into darkness. Whoever reaches the Great One first will hold the balance of power in their hands and control the fate of humanity.
Night Watch (Nochnoj dozor) is the first instalment of a trilogy based on the best-selling science fiction novels of Sergei Lukyanenko entitled Night Watch, Day Watch and Dusk Watch.
Theatrical propaganda posters


Target demographic movie keyword propaganda
- Film Russia supernatural horror vampire battle
Persons of interest
- Konstantin Khabensky .... Anton Gorodetsky
- Vladimir Menshov .... Geser
- Valeri Zolotukhin .... Kostya's Father
- Mariya Poroshina .... Svetlana
- Galina Tyunina .... Sorceress Olga
- Yuri Kutsenko .... Ignat
- Aleksei Chadov .... Kostya
- Zhanna Friske .... Alisa Donnikova
- Ilya Lagutenko .... Andrei the Vampire
- Viktor Verzhbitsky .... Zavulon
- Rimma Markova .... Darya
- Aleksei Maklakov .... Semyon
- Aleksandr Samojlenko .... Transformer-Mage Ilya
- Dmitry Martynov .... Egor
- Anna Slyusaryova .... Transformer-Mage Lena
- Sergei Lukyanenko .... Author
- Sergei Lukyanenko .... Screenwriter
- Timur Bekmambetov .... Screenwriter
- Timur Bekmambetov .... Director
Cinematic intelligence sources
- Night Watch (Nochnoj dozor) official movie sites:
- Australia
- International
- Night Watch (Nochnoj dozor) film production notes
- Night Watch (Nochnoj dozor) movie trailers:
- Awards and film festivals:
- Edinburgh International Film Festival 2005: Official selection
- Sydney Film Festival 2007: Screening
- See also Underworld, Underworld: Evolution
- Studios and distributors:
Intelligence analyst
Special Agent Matti
Theatrical report
Night Watch is a rinky-dink Russian roller coaster of spookiness, violence and tragedy (remember that the Russians invented vodka). The raw grittiness that pervades the film is much superior to the slick Hollywood grittiness (and stylishness) of Underworld. You can imagine this being shot guerrilla-style on the midnight streets of Moscow - strange and fearsome figures scuttling through the abandoned streets, strange noises echoing through the dark...
Cool.
And just think: there are two more episodes to go. Woo hoo!
Security censorship classification
MA 15+ (Strong violence)
Surveillance time
114 minutes (1:54 hours)
Not for public release in Australia before date
Film: 13 October 2005
DVD retail: 15 March 2006
VHS retail: 15 March 2006
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