A Soviet farmer's son, who is working at a Kolchos is killed by his father, who wants to burn the fields of the Kolchos to damage the Soviet Society.A Soviet farmer's son, who is working at a Kolchos is killed by his father, who wants to burn the fields of the Kolchos to damage the Soviet Society.A Soviet farmer's son, who is working at a Kolchos is killed by his father, who wants to burn the fields of the Kolchos to damage the Soviet Society.
Photos
Viktor Kartashov
- Stepok
- (as Vitya Kartashov)
Yelizaveta Teleshyova
- Kolkhoz Chairman
- (as Yekaterina Teleshova)
Pyotr Arzhanov
- Political Commissar
- (as Pavel Ardzhanov)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaProduction was stopped by Soviet officials in 1937. Sergei Eisenstein had spent two years filming and had up to three different completed versions. The footage that had been shot up to that point was taken to a film storage vault, which was destroyed in a German bombing raid during the war. The film was alleged to have also been destroyed at this time; however, the government is thought to have destroyed it earlier on. Eisenstein, though, saved two frames from the beginning and end of all of his shots and in the mid-'60s these were put together according to script, story board and notes for a 31-minute reconstruction of film stills.
- Alternate versionsThe only surviving version of this film was assembled in the 1960s using surviving still frames that Sergei Eisenstein had saved during editing. They were arranged based on the script and set to music. Although the original would have been a sound film, no sound elements are available any more, so the current version is silent, and uses intertitles.
- ConnectionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
Featured review
It is impossible to assess a film that does not exist and never existed, but it is also true that one cannot ignore the masterpiece that it undoubtedly could have been when viewing the very few remains that miraculousy have been restored to us. Just a few photos, focused on a series of important scenes.
They are not shots, because in one shot there is movement, nor are they probably sequences since it is doubtful that all the successive shots of any of the scenes that were shot are preserved, although we would like to think so.
But then there's the famous church desecration scene, in which the town turns a church into a meeting room, dismantling and removing all Orthodox iconography. This sacrilegious scene becomes, by the work and grace of Eisenstein's genius, one of the most beautiful and elevated sequences in the history of cinema. We do not watch to how a religion is destroyed or humiliated or abused, but how it is transformed, reborn into a new one. By dismantling the statues, the icons and replacing them with themselves, the people incarnate in angels, apostles, in the Virgin Mary and in the child Jesus. A Samson separates the columns of the iconostasis, a child is crowned and raised in arms to the heavens. Prokofiev's beautiful music underlines this sacred character of the scene. What could have resulted from blasphemous cruelty, as so often in Soviet cinema, becomes a scene of sweetness and purity unmatched in the history of cinema.
If it is impossible to value a film that no longer exists or that really never existed, we still can value the beauty of some images, imagine how the rhythm and movement would enhance them and regret that a masterpiece of such caliber had been lost. The remains are still a creation of absolute beauty and a lesson about cinematography.
They are not shots, because in one shot there is movement, nor are they probably sequences since it is doubtful that all the successive shots of any of the scenes that were shot are preserved, although we would like to think so.
But then there's the famous church desecration scene, in which the town turns a church into a meeting room, dismantling and removing all Orthodox iconography. This sacrilegious scene becomes, by the work and grace of Eisenstein's genius, one of the most beautiful and elevated sequences in the history of cinema. We do not watch to how a religion is destroyed or humiliated or abused, but how it is transformed, reborn into a new one. By dismantling the statues, the icons and replacing them with themselves, the people incarnate in angels, apostles, in the Virgin Mary and in the child Jesus. A Samson separates the columns of the iconostasis, a child is crowned and raised in arms to the heavens. Prokofiev's beautiful music underlines this sacred character of the scene. What could have resulted from blasphemous cruelty, as so often in Soviet cinema, becomes a scene of sweetness and purity unmatched in the history of cinema.
If it is impossible to value a film that no longer exists or that really never existed, we still can value the beauty of some images, imagine how the rhythm and movement would enhance them and regret that a masterpiece of such caliber had been lost. The remains are still a creation of absolute beauty and a lesson about cinematography.
- Falkner1976
- Mar 22, 2022
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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