

What if a Russian fairy tale got lost in a gas station parking lot?
A half-empty village far from the regional center has been inhabited by characters from Ostrovsky's "Snegurochka," only adjusted to our times. Bobyl and Bobylikha are stationmasters, Berendey is no longer a tsar but a watchman, Lel is a trendy DJ returning from Moscow for the holidays, and his classmate Mizgir is a successful businessman from the regional center. Only Snegurochka seems the same as before. Incapable of emotion, she is doomed to make those around her fall in love with her.
Production
Ostrovsky's mythos crammed into rusted Soviet infrastructure
Acting
Masha Koshina's glacial stillness as emotional black hole
Writing
Classical archetypes begging for WiFi passwords

Director
Vladimir Kott
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Kott continues his obsession with Russian regional decay, previously explored in 'The Cut' and 'Gromozeka' — this time weaponizing Ostrovsky's 1873 play against Putin-era provincial hopelessness.
Bobyl and Bobylikha as stationmasters literalizes the original's 'childless old couple' into infrastructure workers maintaining a dying transit point — nobody passes through, yet they keep the schedule.