When Anton, a Warrior of Light, is falsely accused of murdering some vampires, he embarks on a journey to find the real killer and search for an ancient object that has the power to alter de... Read allWhen Anton, a Warrior of Light, is falsely accused of murdering some vampires, he embarks on a journey to find the real killer and search for an ancient object that has the power to alter destiny.When Anton, a Warrior of Light, is falsely accused of murdering some vampires, he embarks on a journey to find the real killer and search for an ancient object that has the power to alter destiny.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 10 nominations
- Egor
- (as Dima Martynov)
- Tolik
- (as Egor Dronov)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe original movie title was "Nochnoy dozor 2: Mel Sudby" (Night Watch 2: The Chalk of Fate), as the movie is based on two stories from Sergey Lukyanenko's book "Night Watch". A teaser trailer with the title "Nochnoy dozor 2" could be seen on the Russian DVD of The Turkish Gambit (2005). A few months before release, the title was changed to "Dnevnoy dozor" (Day Watch). The end credits reflect the title change to "Dnevnoy dozor", though they keep the subtitle "Mel Sudby".
- GoofsTamerlane is speaking modern Kazakh language.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Narrator: Why does the wind come? To cover tracks where we have passed... so no one thinks we are still alive. It was long ago and no one can remember now how the Warriors of Light and the Warriors of Darkness clashed on the Bridge of Justice... how blood was spilled... how the great Jassar's heart could not bear it and he stopped the battle. But once, when the night is longer than the day, a new Great One will come and the world will be plunged into darkness. And nothing can save it, except for the Chalk of Fate. This Chalk is kept in an impenetrable fortress, and everyone who came for it and entered the gate would perish in the endless maze. So had it always been until Tamerlane came.
- Crazy creditsThe credits for the actors which appear at the beginning of the movie, are shown as street advertising reflecting on the car window shield.
- Alternate versionsThe Russian version is approx. 20 minutes longer than the international cinema release.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood on Set: Ocean's Thirteen/Day Watch/Hostel: Part II (2007)
- SoundtracksFutbol
by W K ?
© (p) TABBAK 2005
As a Russian though, the thing I liked best was the unmistakable Russian-ness of the movie. As far as film-making is concerned, I don't normally mean that as a compliment, but with Day Watch it is different. While it can definitely appeal to a wider international audience (my girlfriend, albeit a bit of a Russophile, is an indication of that), it is at the same time literally packed with all sorts of clever wordplay and references to various realities of Russian life, ranging from political satire to hilariously blatant product placement.
Even though I can enjoy a less obnoxious art-house film every now and then, on the whole I prefer clever commercial movies, and Day Watch falls into that category very neatly.
- How long is Day Watch?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $4,200,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $450,897
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $46,730
- Jun 3, 2007
- Gross worldwide
- $42,918,532
- Runtime2 hours 12 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1