Many films based on screenplays by Valentin Konstantinovich Chernykh (1935–2012) have entered the golden fund of Russian cinema: "Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears" (Oscar-1981), "To Marry a Captain," "Women Shouldn’t Be Offended," "Culture Trip to the Theatre," "Ours." The best directors in the country (Vladimir Menshov, Vitaliy Melnikov, Valeriy Rubinchik, Dmitry Meskhiyev) collaborated with this remarkable author.
V. K. Chernykh’s work is multifaceted and diverse—he always pays close attention to the signs of the times, whether it’s war or the Brezhnev stagnation, perestroika or the realities of the nineties. However, films devoted to women have become especially popular: how they search for love, struggle against fate, and strive to win a worthy place in life. And from the novel "Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears," created by V. K. Chernykh based on his own screenplay, the reader learns a great deal more—and something unexpected—about the heroines of the famous film.
Attention! The audio recording contains profanity.