Opasen char
Encyclopedia
Opasen char is a comedy
Comedy
Comedy , as a popular meaning, is any humorous discourse or work generally intended to amuse by creating laughter, especially in television, film, and stand-up comedy. This must be carefully distinguished from its academic definition, namely the comic theatre, whose Western origins are found in...

/crime
Crime
Crime is the breach of rules or laws for which some governing authority can ultimately prescribe a conviction...

 film released in Bulgaria
Bulgaria
Bulgaria , officially the Republic of Bulgaria , is a parliamentary democracy within a unitary constitutional republic in Southeast Europe. The country borders Romania to the north, Serbia and Macedonia to the west, Greece and Turkey to the south, as well as the Black Sea to the east...

 in 1984. It was directed by Ivan Andonov and written by Svoboda Bachvarova. The story is about a highly educated and charming gentleman - the dream of every lonely lady. In fact he is a brilliant cheat, who robs naïve women. He constantly changes his name, his exploits are countless and his life is one everlasting adventure.

Plot

Born with the plain name Gencho Gunchev and with the soul of an adventurer, he cannot settle with the daily grind of a clerk. Using his charm, Gunchev begins relationships with rich women and after that disappears with their money.

Pretending to be the famous freelance architect Yastrebovski, he wrings a huge amount of money out of a group of naïve people. The swindling is caught in a bar where he squanders the money of those people. Despite he is well-known to the police with all his reincarnations (see Special notes at the end), he manages to provoke sympathy in the inspector in charge (Tzvetan). Simulating illness, Gunchev is hospitalized, and in the hospital he manages to forge his death certificate. Then he goes to Bourgas in a search for his next victim. There he meets the intelligent and sensitive teacher Boryana and they both fall in love with each other. But soon, realizing he will be caught, Gunchev escapes from Boryana, taking only a picture of her.

Again in Sofia, not without the help of providence, he manages to steal a uniform of a police captain. By accident he catches a man (Sedlarov) who has an illegal workshop in his house. Gunchev accepts the bribe from Sedlarov and, true to his nature, offers to marry his daughter, Sevelina. Under the name Iliya Burevestnikov he blackmails all illegal private contractors in the area and incidentally comes across one of his ex-wives. His identity is uncovered and he finds himself again in custody. The only thing he requests from the inspectors before going in jail is the picture of Boryana.

Cast

  • Todor Kolev - Gencho Gunchev (Yastrebovski, Orelski, Pelikanski, Sokolov, Radul Misirkov, Iliya Burevestnikov)
  • Nevena Kokanova - Boryana
  • Stefan Mavrodiyev - Tzvetan, inspector
  • Lyuben Chatalov - Inspector Boychinov
  • Georgi Rusev
    Georgi Rusev
    Georgi Iliev Rusev was a Bulgarian theatre and film actor.Rusev created a real gallery of colorful characters for about four decades in the film industry. He became famous as a master of the so called "second plan roles".-Biography and Career:...

     - Kolyu Sedlarov
  • Tatyana Lolova - Leda
  • Nadya Todorova - Mimi Sedlarova
  • Tzvetana Maneva - Inspector Vateva
  • Margarita Karamiteva - Sevelina, the daughter of Kolyu Sedlarov
  • Petar Slabakov - Inspector Peshanov

Awards

Grand Prix of the International TV Film Festival Teleconfronto di Chinciano Terme, Italy, 1985

Special Award of the Festival International de film d’humour de Chamrousse, France, 1988

The Award for Male Act given to Todor Kolev at the International Comedy and Satirical Film Festival, Gabrovo, 1985

The Best Script Award of the Union of Bulgarian Filmmakers for Svoboda Bachvarova.

Special notes

All characters of Gunchev adopt family names that are derived from the name of a bird.
  • Yastrebovski - comes from the Bulgarian for hawk, which is pronounced as "yastreb"
  • Orelski - comes from the Bulgarian for eagle, which is pronounced as "orel"
  • Pelikanski - comes from pelican
  • Sokolov - comes from the Bulgarian for falcon, which is pronounced as "sokol"
  • Misirkov - comes from the Bulgarian for turkey, which is pronounced as "misirka" (dialect
    Dialect
    The term dialect is used in two distinct ways, even by linguists. One usage refers to a variety of a language that is a characteristic of a particular group of the language's speakers. The term is applied most often to regional speech patterns, but a dialect may also be defined by other factors,...

    )
  • Burevestnikov - comes from the Bulgarian for thunderbird, which is pronounced as "burevestnik"
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