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Sudba cheloveka

  • 1959
  • 1h 43m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,9/10
4 k
MA NOTE
Sudba cheloveka (1959)
DrameGuerre

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA Soviet soldier, Andrei Sokolov, has been separated from his family by World War II. Suffering in German captivity, he dreams of meeting his darlings after the victory. But cruel fate turne... Tout lireA Soviet soldier, Andrei Sokolov, has been separated from his family by World War II. Suffering in German captivity, he dreams of meeting his darlings after the victory. But cruel fate turned out otherwise.A Soviet soldier, Andrei Sokolov, has been separated from his family by World War II. Suffering in German captivity, he dreams of meeting his darlings after the victory. But cruel fate turned out otherwise.

  • Director
    • Sergey Bondarchuk
  • Writers
    • Yuriy Lukin
    • Fyodor Shakhmagonov
    • Mikhail Sholokhov
  • Stars
    • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Pavel Boriskin
    • Zinaida Kirienko
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,9/10
    4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Writers
      • Yuriy Lukin
      • Fyodor Shakhmagonov
      • Mikhail Sholokhov
    • Stars
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
      • Pavel Boriskin
      • Zinaida Kirienko
    • 16Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 13Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos90

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    Rôles principaux42

    Modifier
    Sergey Bondarchuk
    Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Andrey Sokolov
    Pavel Boriskin
    Pavel Boriskin
    • Vanyushka
    • (as Pavlik Boriskin)
    Zinaida Kirienko
    Zinaida Kirienko
    • Irina Sokolova
    • (as Z. Kirienko)
    Pavel Volkov
    Pavel Volkov
    • Ivan Timofeevich
    • (as P. Volkov)
    Yuri Averin
    Yuri Averin
    • Müller
    • (as Yu. Averin)
    Konstantin Alekseev
    Konstantin Alekseev
    • German Major Engineer
    • (as K. Alekseev)
    Pavel Vinnikov
    Pavel Vinnikov
    • Soviet Colonel
    • (as P. Vinnikov)
    Evgeniy Teterin
    Evgeniy Teterin
    • Writer
    • (as E. Teterin)
    Anatoli Chemodurov
    Anatoli Chemodurov
    • Soviet Artillery Lieutenant Colonel
    • (as A. Chemodurov)
    Aleksandr Novikov
    Aleksandr Novikov
    • Soviet Devout Soldier
    • (as A. Novikov)
    Lev Borisov
    Lev Borisov
    • Platoon Commander
    • (as L. Borisov)
    Viktor Markin
    Viktor Markin
    • Military Doctor
    • (as V. Markin)
    Yevgeni Kudryashov
    Yevgeni Kudryashov
    • Kryzhnev
    • (as E. Kudryashov)
    Aleksandr Kuznetsov
      Vladimir Ivanov
      Vladimir Ivanov
      • Lead Singer
      • (as V. Ivanov)
      Pyotr Savin
      Pyotr Savin
      • Pyotr
      • (as P. Savin)
      Yevgeniya Melnikova
      Yevgeniya Melnikova
      • Landlady
      • (as E. Melnikova)
      Vyacheslav Beryozko
        • Director
          • Sergey Bondarchuk
        • Writers
          • Yuriy Lukin
          • Fyodor Shakhmagonov
          • Mikhail Sholokhov
        • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Commentaires des utilisateurs16

        7,94K
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        Avis en vedette

        8MogwaiMovieReviews

        I Never Feel Like Eating After Only One Glass

        A WWII Soviet soldier is captured by the Nazis but strives to escape and return home to his family.

        Another of those great Russian war films from the late 50s/early 60s, which, as with Japan, seems to have been the nation's best era for cinema. The quicksilverlike photography is predictably superlative, and there are solid performances all round, especially from the lead, Sergey Bondarchuk, who also directed the film.

        There's a number of clumsy transitions between scenes in the last half hour of the film that don't really work, and it perhaps runs a little out of steam once he has escaped, but that's about the most I can come up with in terms of criticism, and the final impression one takes away is less of battlefields than the healing, rebuilding and moving on from them that has to take place afterwards.

        Well worth watching if you're in the mood for a 90-minute war epic, alongside The Cranes are Flying and Ballad of A Soldier.
        7tom neal

        suffering?

        This first directorial effort from actor Bondarchuk (mainly known for his monumental War and Peace) shouldn't have starred the director. His ruddy countenance didn't convince me one bit he suffered through all the mishaps in his life during the Great War. Furthermore I found it very hard to believe the Germans went to so much effort to save the lives of these Untermenschen. There were good performances though and it is shot beautifully.

        Watch instead Come and See (Idi i Smotri) for a shattering experience of the Great War.
        8ilpohirvonen

        The Presence of the Past

        Sergey Bondarchuk is probably best known for his epic spectacle "War and Peace" (1966), and his outstanding feature debut "The Destiny of Man" (1959) was made in the same tradition of the war genre, though not in a similarly big fashion. Like many other Soviet war films made during the cultural thaw in Eastern Europe caused by the spirit of Geneva such as "The Cranes Are Flying" (1957) and "Ballad of a Soldier" (1959), "The Destiny of Man" focuses on the human experience in the bleak misery of war. It tells the story of an ordinary man who lost everything during a war that meant nothing to him.

        The historical legacy and the poignantly present memory of the Second World War played an integral role in almost all of the Soviet films made during the cultural thaw. It is as though life itself was approached from this perspective. An entire generation was left alone with their problems to sink into oblivion in the era of Stalin's cult of personality. Not until the new political waves of the 1950's arrived were these people dealt properly in cinema.

        "The Destiny of Man" cuts right to the memory of WWII as it begins from the first spring after the war. A man recalls his experiences during the war and ponders why life has mistreated him so in a long flashback. Bondarchuk's mobile camera fluently shifts to the past -- the memory -- revealing its reality before our eyes. His style is very modern, as is the case with other films from this period, born from dynamic movement, montage and intensity of close-ups. Accompanied by an astonishing soundtrack with nearly surreal tones and a great score by Venyamin Basner, this poetic voyage to the days gone by touches our very core.

        The film was made in the same year with Masaki Kobayashi's masterful trilogy "The Human Condition" (1959-1962) which also highlights the experience and moral disappointment of an individual in times of immeasurable brutality. "The Destiny of Man" also includes a sequence taking place in a POW camp where the prisoners are forced to work, thus inevitably triggering an association with the first part of Kobayashi's trilogy. A perceptive spectator (or an obsessive fan of Kobayashi) might even observe a shot bearing a striking resemblance to the iconic image of workers walking up the hill.

        What makes "The Destiny of Man" to stand the test of time and lifts it up to the same level with "The Cranes Are Flying" and "Ballad of a Soldier" is its profoundness. It is not a profoundness achieved simply by story, but by form. This can be seen in the film's aesthetics which is tremendously rich of tone and meaning. Bondarchuk truly achieves to depict the complexity of human experience and historical conditions. The cinematic repertoire of the image, the scenes and even entire sequences extends from the brief vibrations of the dramatic surface to the aesthetic profoundness of human existence.
        7CinemaSerf

        The Fate of a Man

        "Sokolov" (Sergey Bondarchuk) hopes that his warrior days are behind him after the civil war as he settles down with sweetheart "Irina" (Zinaida Kirienko) and starts a family. Sadly for him, the Nazis don't share his desires for a peaceable life and so he is duly conscripted into the Soviet army. Like so many of his counterparts, he waves goodbye to his family promising to return but having no real idea when or if he shall. Things definitely don't get off to a good start when he is captured by the invaders and imprisoned amidst a perilous environment of arbitrary killings regardless of whether you are a prisoner of war, a Russian citizen or a Jew. With the impetus of the war shifting, though, he manages to escape and we follow his attempts to make it back home to his family. Now this is told in retrospective so we do know what the outcome of his searching is going to be and as we near the denouement we find a character that's utterly devoid of hope - until the young lad "Vanya" (a joyous effort from Pavel Boriskin) makes an unpredictably profound impact on the older man now largely bereft of purpose. The wartime photography delivers strongly here illustrating the mayhem and chaos brought by the indiscriminate activities of their enemy and, latterly, their own forces whilst clearly demonstrating the horrors randomly inflicted on the population. Bondarchuk is also expert at portraying a character that is simple, decent and ultimately one who wants merely to be left to the joys of his family and his hard work. That's especially poignant when he is facing death at the hands of the prison camp commandant who sees the killing of his inmates as little different from sport. There's a tiny bit of religiosity in here too, which I thought added an extra human dimension to a story that could just as easily be applied to any of a million foot soldiers fighting in WWII without knowing what was going on at home. If the last scene doesn't bring a lump to your throat...
        8jhrclbpmar

        Soviet POW's Belatedly Rehabilitated

        The work is absolutely stunning visually, at times radical in its framing. It is perfectly understandable that since the film was made only 5 years after Stalin's death the political strictures under which it was made forced the director to be careful to avoid depicting the persecution suffered by returning Soviet POW's under his rule, but by focusing on the suffering they, and most particularly the protagonist, experienced as prisoners in German work camps and the steadfast and heroic endurance they maintained in the face of cruelty and hardship he is completely successful in politically rehabilitating them as patriots, both for their contemporaries and for Soviet posterity. A beautiful and at times quite moving film. Highly recommended.

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        Histoire

        Modifier

        Le saviez-vous

        Modifier
        • Anecdotes
          The Best Film in the poll of the magazine "Soviet Screen" in 1960.
        • Gaffes
          When the lead character steals the Nazi car, in broad daylight, a owl echo sounds.
        • Citations

          Sokolov: [Snaps to attention] Prisoner Sokolov reporting as ordered.

          Muller: So four cubic meters is too much to quarry, eh?

          Sokolov: It is, Commandant, far too much.

          Muller: And you need only one cubic meter for your grave, right?

          Sokolov: Yes, that's quite enough for a grave. Even there'd be room to spare.

          Muller: I'm going to do you a great honor. I'll shoot you with my own pistol.

          [Gesturing with his gun]

          Muller: Let's go into the yard.

          Sokolov: Whatever you say.

          [Turns sharply about face]

          Muller: Have a drink before you die, Russian Ivan. To the triumphant armies of the fatherland.

          [Officers around the table stand for the toast]

          Sokolov: [Places his drink down on the table] I appreciate it, but I'm not much of a drinker.

          Muller: You refuse to drink to our victory?

          [Goes to the table, returns with a piece of bread]

          Muller: Very well, then. I propose you drink to your death.

          Sokolov: To my death and my release from this torment, I will drink.

          [Drinks entire glass of vodka in one draught, places the glass on the table and the bread on the top of the glass]

          Sokolov: I'm ready now, Herr Commandant, come on.

          Muller: Have a bite to eat before you die.

          Sokolov: I never feel like eating after only one glass.

          Muller: [Pours another glass full, offers him the bread and glass] Don't be shy, go ahead.

          Sokolov: [Drinks second glass dry, replaces the glass and bread] . Sorry, Herr Commandant, but I don't eat after two glasses, either.

          Muller: [Officers at table, laughing and applauding: Bravo! It's incredible. He's had a whole bottle without eating anything!. Commandant returns to table, slowly pours a third drink, filling the glass to the brim]

          Sokolov: [Takes third glass and bread from the Commandant. Pauses, then drinks entire glass while staring at Commandant. Takes a tiny bit of bread, leaves the rest with the glass on the table]

          Muller: [Ordering his officers to be silent] Listen here, Sokolov. You're a good Russian soldier. A brave soldier. I'm a soldier also. And I respect a worthy enemy. I'm not going to shoot you. This morning our invincible armies reached the Volga and have taken complete possession of Stalingrad. And to this marvelous news you owe your life which I generously give back to you. Return to your barracks.

          [Picks up a loaf of bread and butter from the table]

          Muller: Take this with you, for your courage.

        • Connexions
          Featured in Sergey Bondarchuk (1982)

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        FAQ14

        • How long is The Destiny of a Man?Propulsé par Alexa

        Détails

        Modifier
        • Date de sortie
          • 12 avril 1959 (Soviet Union)
        • Pays d’origine
          • Soviet Union
        • Langues
          • Russian
          • German
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • The Destiny of a Man
        • Lieux de tournage
          • Tambov, Russie
        • société de production
          • Mosfilm
        • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

        Modifier
        • Durée
          • 1h 43m(103 min)
        • Couleur
          • Black and White
        • Mixage
          • Mono
        • Rapport de forme
          • 1.37 : 1

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