Three Seconds (Движение вверх) 6 years old
The story is set at the 1972 Munich Olympics where the U.S. team lost the basketball championship for the first time in 36 years. The final moments of the final game have become one of the most controversial events in Olympic history. With play tied, the score table horn sounded during a second free throw attempt that put the U.S. ahead by one. But the Soviets claimed they had called for a time out before the basket and confusion ensued. The clock was set back by three seconds twice in a row and the Russians finally prevailed at the very last. The U.S. protested, but a jury decided in the USSR’s favor and Team USA voted unanimously to refuse its silver medals. The Soviet players have been treated as heroes at home.
Credits
Three Seconds Cast
Name | Character |
---|---|
Sergey Garmash He was 59, now 66 years old | |
Marat Basharov He was 43, now 50 years old | |
Viktoriya Tolstoganova was 45, now 52 years old | |
Andrius Paulavičius He was 45, now 52 years old | as Jonas |
John Savage He was 68, now 75 years old | |
Natalya Kurdyubova She was 42, now 49 years old | as sports commentator |
Andrey Smolyakov He was 59, now 66 years old | |
Vladimir Mashkov He was 54, now 61 years old |
Three Seconds Crew
Name | Department |
---|---|
Leonid Vereshchagin as Producer. He was 64 (now 71) years old | Production |
Anton Megerdichev as Director. He was 48 (now 55) years old | Directing |
Nikita Mikhalkov as Producer. He was 72 (now 79) years old | Production |
Nikolai Kulikov as Screenplay. He was 38 (now 45) years old | Writing |
Anton Zlatopolsky as Producer. He was 51 (now 58) years old | Production |