IMDb RATING
6.9/10
280
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Three unconnected episodes united by a common theme: the establishment of the Soviet rule in Russia during the civil war of the early 1920s. Depicts dramatic events in simple lives of peasan... Read allThree unconnected episodes united by a common theme: the establishment of the Soviet rule in Russia during the civil war of the early 1920s. Depicts dramatic events in simple lives of peasants and soldiers.Three unconnected episodes united by a common theme: the establishment of the Soviet rule in Russia during the civil war of the early 1920s. Depicts dramatic events in simple lives of peasants and soldiers.
Photos
Tatyana Belikova
- (segment "Angel")
- (as Tanya Belikova)
Yevgeniy Goryunov
- (segment "Rodina elektrichestva")
- (as Evgeniy Goryunov)
Aleksandra Popova
- (segment "Rodina elektrichestva")
- (as Alla Popova)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter the three-part film was screened for the censors twice in 1967, the film was denied a theatrical release. The segment directed by Genrikh Gabai (Motria) was aired on TV two years later. The segments directed by Andrei Smirnov (Angel) and Larissa Shepitko (Homeland of Electricity) would not be shown again until twenty years later, under the "glasnost" policy of Gorbachev.
- GoofsIn the angel, people are shown riding on a flatbed railway car, but they are going too fast considering there is no locomotive to push them along. This is proven when shortly after they are seen pushing the same flatbed truck at a slow, walking pace.
- Alternate versionsThe full original three part film negative is considered lost. However, a print of Andrei Smirnov's episode Angel and Larissa Shepitko's Homeland of Electricity survived-both films were premiered at the 1987 Moscow Film Festival.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema (2018)
Featured review
1967 was the 50th birthday of the October revolution. Celebrations like this call for cinema to properly honor a country's history, to refresh the national memory about the days gone by, in an uplifting manner. This film doesn't do it. It is a episodic work by three young directors: Genrikh Gabay, Larisa Shepitko and Andrey Smirnov. All three had some experience by now, all having directed at least one film. This collaborative effort does not actually take place during the revolution, but in the aftermath of it. It takes place in 1920, and shows how people living in the outskirts of Russia received the arrival of a new, unknown age.
The full film has been lost to history. The film views people in naturalistic and pessimistic manner, a style that Larisa Shepitko would develop further in her later films. Because of the nastiness of the picture, Soviet censorship did not embrace it warmly. Out of the three episodes, only Gabai's was deemed clean enough to be shown to public, with Shepitko's and Smirnov's work being put on a shelf. However, something happened later, and Gabai's episode was lost, so amusingly what's left for future generations is a cut, that includes the two forbidden episodes, but not the one that the Soviets preferred.
It's an interesting story, and an interesting subject. But one can hardly view this as a classic of Soviet cinema. The subject has been scrutinized in various better films, and the structure that gives 30 minutes per episode really inhibits their chances to become deep enough, or to include enough reasons and consequences for the actions depicted. Smirnov's episode is about soldiers on a train track and the brutal faith of people with a differing ideology. Shepitko's is about life's harshness in the poor countryside. In both, the cinematography is great, but as narratives they lack a proper bite.
The full film has been lost to history. The film views people in naturalistic and pessimistic manner, a style that Larisa Shepitko would develop further in her later films. Because of the nastiness of the picture, Soviet censorship did not embrace it warmly. Out of the three episodes, only Gabai's was deemed clean enough to be shown to public, with Shepitko's and Smirnov's work being put on a shelf. However, something happened later, and Gabai's episode was lost, so amusingly what's left for future generations is a cut, that includes the two forbidden episodes, but not the one that the Soviets preferred.
It's an interesting story, and an interesting subject. But one can hardly view this as a classic of Soviet cinema. The subject has been scrutinized in various better films, and the structure that gives 30 minutes per episode really inhibits their chances to become deep enough, or to include enough reasons and consequences for the actions depicted. Smirnov's episode is about soldiers on a train track and the brutal faith of people with a differing ideology. Shepitko's is about life's harshness in the poor countryside. In both, the cinematography is great, but as narratives they lack a proper bite.
- topitimo-829-270459
- Dec 1, 2019
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Beginning of an Unbeknown Age
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 13 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Beginning of an Unknown Era (1967) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer