The film was produced by Pronto Film with a budget of about ₴16,762,000, with the Ukrainian State Film Agency financing parts. The film would then go on to make ₴16.6 million, although ₴14.1 million was given back to the Ukrainian State Film Agency, making the true amount at around ₴2.5 million.[2] It was selected as the Ukrainian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards,[3] but was not nominated.[4] There was some controversy over the selection of the film in Ukraine regarding the voting process.[5]
Set during the early 1930s in Soviet Ukraine, American engineer Michael Shamrock arrives in Kharkiv with his ten-year-old son, Peter to help "build socialism". He falls in love with an actress Olga, of whom she has another admirer, Commissar Vladimir. However, Michael gets his hands onto secret documents about a planned mass seizure of food by the Soviets. As a result, he is killed whilst boarding a train. Peter then escapes his father's killers by hiding into the car of another train.
Peter is then saved by a blind bard (kobzar) named Ivan Kocherga. With no other chance to survive in a foreign land, Peter becomes Ivan's guide.[9] Meanwhile, Vladimir dedicates himself to find Peter.
Since its release, The Guide has generated generally favourable reviews.[citation needed]
On IMDb, The Guide has an average rating of 7.7/10.[10]
Awards and nominations
Following the announcement of The Guide being nominated by the Ukrainian Oscar committee, several individuals left the committee in protest including the head of the Ukrainian Association of Cinematographers, Serhiy Trymbach.[11]
^Sanin, Oles (12 November 2014), Povodyr (Drama, History), Stanislav Boklan, Jeff Burrell, Boris Georgievskiy, Pronto Film, Ukrainian State Film Agency, retrieved 14 August 2023