VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
2424
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.A soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.A soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria in totale
Semyon Svashenko
- Timosh - the Ukrainian
- (as S. Svashenko)
Georgi Khorkov
- A Red Army Soldier
- (as G. Khorkov)
Amvrosi Buchma
- Laughing-Gassed German Soldier
- (as A. Buchma)
Dmitri Erdman
- A German Officer
- (as D. Erdman)
Sergey Petrov
- A German Soldier
- (as S. Petrov)
M. Mikhajlovsky
- A Nationalist
- (as Mikhajlovsky)
Aleksandr Evdakov
- Tsar Nikolas II
- (as A. Evdakov)
Luciano Albertini
- Raffaele
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nikolai Kuchinsky
- Symon Petliura
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pyotr Masokha
- Workman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Osip Merlatti
- The actor Sadovsky
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nikolai Nademsky
- Grandpa
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Aleksandr Podorozhnyy
- Pavloo
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Boris Zagorsky
- Dead Soldier
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe film concerns an episode in the Russian Civil War in 1918 in which the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising of workers aided the besieging Bolshevik army against the Ukrainian national Parliament Central Rada who held legal power in Ukraine at the time.
- BlooperIn a scene early in the film, a soldier lies dead, covered with sand, but the sand can be seen to rise and fall with the actor's breathing.
- ConnessioniEdited into Le tombeau d'Alexandre (1993)
Recensione in evidenza
It boggles the mind to contemplate how far back was cinema set with the advent of sound; not sound per se, but the whole political environment that was concurrent at the time. So many fascinating experiments with film were afoot by the late 20's and would be put on hold for the next twenty, thirty years.
With DW Griffith ten years before, cinema was a transliteration. The narrative was straight-forward, time, even when broken apart, was a straight line that rushed towards climax that revealed our placement in destiny, the chain of causality was clearly defined - this begat that, and we perfectly understood why. Film was merely a tool of chronicle, with the gods - the mechanisms above - and shadows - the internal image outwardly recast - largely taken out.
But just ten years later, something like this was already so far ahead. So, the causality of events is left to our sphere of imagination, narrative is fragmented, purposely eliptic into modernist abstraction. Images require our folding in them to be complete with meaning, or channel their imports across different levels of experience; there is a scene of men rushing on horses to bury their comrade, they could be rushing into a number of things; and back at the weapons foundry where a strike is holding up, eloquent shots of machinery whirring in motion suggest afoot the social machinations at large. Life here is not passed down to us whole, with purpose or meaning; but is rather the process of coming into being.
This is far-reaching stuff in terms of what can be done with cinema. It posits that the image can directly depict private, inner states and larger, collective worlds as bound together by common soul - the oppressed peasants motionless like zombies, the military officer mechanically shooting at partisans. The shots of galloping horses are frenzied, but up above the clouded skies ebb with time. So, what started only a couple of years before in Soviet studios had reached this apex; image was engineered - or perhaps intuited in the case of Dovzhenko, who was the least of the theorists - to unify vision. The empire is inland as well as out, and stretches across the one space.
There are few words in all of this, our safe passage with logic is made perilous, adventuresome. Germanic cinema offered us the world of noir and I am grateful to them; but when it comes to what we often call 'pure cinema' as a quick resort, they could not match here - or France.
Oh, there is The Last Laugh, which is a marvellous study. But purely in terms of images Dovzhenko is worth two or three of those.
With DW Griffith ten years before, cinema was a transliteration. The narrative was straight-forward, time, even when broken apart, was a straight line that rushed towards climax that revealed our placement in destiny, the chain of causality was clearly defined - this begat that, and we perfectly understood why. Film was merely a tool of chronicle, with the gods - the mechanisms above - and shadows - the internal image outwardly recast - largely taken out.
But just ten years later, something like this was already so far ahead. So, the causality of events is left to our sphere of imagination, narrative is fragmented, purposely eliptic into modernist abstraction. Images require our folding in them to be complete with meaning, or channel their imports across different levels of experience; there is a scene of men rushing on horses to bury their comrade, they could be rushing into a number of things; and back at the weapons foundry where a strike is holding up, eloquent shots of machinery whirring in motion suggest afoot the social machinations at large. Life here is not passed down to us whole, with purpose or meaning; but is rather the process of coming into being.
This is far-reaching stuff in terms of what can be done with cinema. It posits that the image can directly depict private, inner states and larger, collective worlds as bound together by common soul - the oppressed peasants motionless like zombies, the military officer mechanically shooting at partisans. The shots of galloping horses are frenzied, but up above the clouded skies ebb with time. So, what started only a couple of years before in Soviet studios had reached this apex; image was engineered - or perhaps intuited in the case of Dovzhenko, who was the least of the theorists - to unify vision. The empire is inland as well as out, and stretches across the one space.
There are few words in all of this, our safe passage with logic is made perilous, adventuresome. Germanic cinema offered us the world of noir and I am grateful to them; but when it comes to what we often call 'pure cinema' as a quick resort, they could not match here - or France.
Oh, there is The Last Laugh, which is a marvellous study. But purely in terms of images Dovzhenko is worth two or three of those.
- chaos-rampant
- 5 set 2011
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Arsenal
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Kyiv, Ucraina(street scenes, procession in front of St Sophia Cathedral)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 33 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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