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Russian Ark

Original title: Russkiy kovcheg
  • 2002
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
23K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,304
3,659
Russian Ark (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Wellspring
Play trailer2:17
5 Videos
78 Photos
Historical EpicDramaFantasyHistoryMystery

A 19th century French aristocrat, notorious for his scathing memoirs about life in Russia, travels through the Russian State Hermitage Museum and encounters historical figures from the last ... Read allA 19th century French aristocrat, notorious for his scathing memoirs about life in Russia, travels through the Russian State Hermitage Museum and encounters historical figures from the last 200+ years.A 19th century French aristocrat, notorious for his scathing memoirs about life in Russia, travels through the Russian State Hermitage Museum and encounters historical figures from the last 200+ years.

  • Director
    • Aleksandr Sokurov
  • Writers
    • Boris Khaimsky
    • Anatoli Nikiforov
    • Svetlana Proskurina
  • Stars
    • Sergey Dreyden
    • Mariya Kuznetsova
    • Leonid Mozgovoy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    23K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,304
    3,659
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Sokurov
    • Writers
      • Boris Khaimsky
      • Anatoli Nikiforov
      • Svetlana Proskurina
    • Stars
      • Sergey Dreyden
      • Mariya Kuznetsova
      • Leonid Mozgovoy
    • 198User reviews
    • 85Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos5

    Russian Ark
    Trailer 2:17
    Russian Ark
    IMDbrief: 'Outlaw King' & Most Epic Tracking Shots in Film History
    Clip 3:59
    IMDbrief: 'Outlaw King' & Most Epic Tracking Shots in Film History
    IMDbrief: 'Outlaw King' & Most Epic Tracking Shots in Film History
    Clip 3:59
    IMDbrief: 'Outlaw King' & Most Epic Tracking Shots in Film History
    Russian Ark Scene: Additional Scenes
    Clip 4:14
    Russian Ark Scene: Additional Scenes
    Russian Ark: Featurette
    Featurette 6:16
    Russian Ark: Featurette
    Russian Ark: B-Roll
    Featurette 2:20
    Russian Ark: B-Roll

    Photos77

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Sergey Dreyden
    Sergey Dreyden
    • The Stranger (The Marquis de Custine)
    Mariya Kuznetsova
    • Catherine The Great
    Leonid Mozgovoy
    Leonid Mozgovoy
    • The Spy
    Mikhail Piotrovsky
    • Self (Hermitage Director)
    David Giorgobiani
    David Giorgobiani
    • Orbeli
    Aleksandr Chaban
    Aleksandr Chaban
    • Boris Piotrovsky
    Lev Eliseev
    Lev Eliseev
    • Self
    Oleg Khmelnitsky
    • Self
    Alla Osipenko
    Alla Osipenko
    • Self
    Artyom Strelnikov
    • Talented Boy
    Tamara Kurenkova
    • Self (Blind Woman)
    Maksim Sergeev
    Maksim Sergeev
    • Peter the Great
    Natalya Nikulenko
    • Catherine the Great
    Elena Rufanova
    Elena Rufanova
    • First Lady
    Yelena Spiridonova
    • Second Lady
    Konstantin Anisimov
    • First Cavalier
    Aleksey Barabash
    Aleksey Barabash
    • Second Cavalier
    Ilya Shakunov
    Ilya Shakunov
    • Third Cavalier
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Sokurov
    • Writers
      • Boris Khaimsky
      • Anatoli Nikiforov
      • Svetlana Proskurina
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews198

    7.222.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Philby-3

    A feature length virtual museum tour

    If you like visiting the homes of the formerly high and mighty, or have a passion for museums, this film ought to satisfy. It's really a virtual tour of the Hermitage Museum (the former Winter Palace) in St Petersburg but with 2800 actors and extras in full costume to add a little verisimilitude to the occasion. (If you want to repeat the experience for free visit the Hermitages' brilliant web site). I can believe that the whole 90 minutes was filmed in one take (at the third attempt) but I was staggered that the museum authorities allowed them to do it. Perhaps the clincher was to include a role for the present museum director who is seen with some of his predecessors fretting over the state of the Tsar's throne's upholstery.

    Not knowing a lot of Russian history, some of the scenes didn't make much sense, but I did cotton on to Anastasia being late for tea. Maybe she got away after all. There was nothing from the Soviet era, except a brief scene during the German siege of Lenningrad (a million died, mainly from starvation, and many made coffins for themselves before they expired). This seems appropriate, since the communists contributed nothing to the buildings, which were started by Peter the Great and added to by his successors. A bad fire in 1837 was followed by extensive reconstruction and many of the rooms we see in the film date from that time.

    I suppose this is the first film in which the set is the star and the actors merely props. There is in fact one dramatic part, that of the French Marquis who attended the Tsar's court in the 1840s, and who is somehow able to take us backward and forward in time. Even he is a bit two-dimensional, in fact the other, unseen, presence (the voice of the director of the film) is as real.

    Towards the end we attend a great ball, and the Marquis gets to dance the Marzurka again. The music is great (is that Glinka conducting something of this own?) and the atmosphere gay (as somebody says `you can't be shy for the Mazurka') and for a moment history is forgotten. But we don't have a plot, the characters are cut-outs (with the exception of Catherine who seems to have been one of the more boisterous Empresses in history) and, basically, nothing happens. Yet I found myself absorbed by it all, occasionally wishing I could click my mouse to zoom in on an interesting painting. Ironically, much of the art is non-Russian, so `Russian Ark' is something of a misnomer – `Euro-Ark' is nearer the mark. At the end of the day, though, I am lost with admiration for the cinematographer, who managed to keep his digital camera running and pointed in the right direction for 90 minutes without making a mistake. Madness, brilliant Russian madness.
    8Terrell-4

    Fascinating Tour de Force

    A 90-minute movie centered on St. Petersburg's Hermitage Museum, filmed in one unbroken take by a digital steadicam, didn't send a lot of Americans racing to buy tickets when it was shown here two or three years ago. The movie, however, is far more than just a technical stunt. It's a unique tour de force with emotional impact.

    Russian Ark portrays the Hermitage as a kind of cultural and historical ark floating on centuries of Russian seas. The narrative device is a shadowy eighteenth century Frenchman who wanders the halls and time periods, commenting often with good-natured European condescension on what he sees. He is accompanied by a Russian who is never seen, and who questions him about his comments. The movie ranges through time with appearances of Peter the Great, Catherine II, Pushkin, Nicholas II and his family, generals, maids, flunkies and diplomats. The Frenchman, played with great style by Russian actor Sergei Dreiden, takes us to painting and sculpture galleries, kitchens, ballrooms, storerooms, basements and living quarters as we observe things that happened in the Hermitage over the centuries.

    At first, I was very aware of the technical feat of no cuts. Gradually, though, I think most people just relax and accept the skill of the director and photographer, and become immersed in what they are seeing. A kind of unreal imagery takes hold. The movie ends with the last dance held in the Great Ballroom before WWI. Hundreds of actors and dancers, in full costume, swirl around this ornate setting, and swirl around the camera as well, while the camera glides through the crowds. It's a terrific scene, and is followed by the end of the dance with all the hundreds of guests making their way through the halls and staircases to leave the building, with the camera facing them and moving along in front of them.

    This is a highly unusual film, probably a great one.
    9desperateliving

    9/10

    This documentary-type movie, done all in one long, unbroken take with a steadicam, has the camera basically hovering around a famous Russian museum for an hour and-a-half as the unseen film director (both by us and the others in the museum) makes comments, as if in a dream, and converses with a French, former diplomat from the 1800s. It's a mix of a museum tour, Russian history, and performance art -- Catherine the Great appears at one point, desperately looking for the toilet. I liked it because it's about the closest thing to a dreamstate you can get in film, something like the long tracking shots in Tarkovsky's movies; I didn't get a lot of the references to Russian historical figures, but it doesn't really matter. However, if you know Russian history, you may get extra enjoyment out of it and might latch onto the sarcastic bits better than I did. I think this is a real achievement; a perfect example of how style is substance. 9/10
    9Galina_movie_fan

    "This Ark Will Sail Forever"

    I found "Russian Ark" a fascinating work of a very ambitious director. For me, it was a highly enjoyable guided tour through the rooms, galleries, and halls of one of the greatest museums in the world. I have not been to Hermitage (Winter Palace) for over fourteen years, and to see the familiar rooms, stairs, paintings, and sculptures was like traveling back in time. The film is also the journey over three hundred years of the Russian history and the attempt to understand the country's place and meaning in European culture. Each of the palace's rooms is filled with memories, shadows, whispers, smiles, and tears of the people whose lives have made the history of the country. The fact that it is all presented in a single, the longest uninterrupted shot ever makes it even more incredible. I also saw the documentary about making "Russian Ark". It is called "On One Breath" - that's how the director, Alexander Sokurov wanted his audience to feel about the film that was shot in a single glorious take during several hours on one winter night. The preparation for this unforgettable night took almost four years.
    bob the moo

    Technically impressive, content-wise it was interesting rather than engaging

    An unnamed and unseen filmmaker finds himself in the Hermitage museum in St Petersburg in what appears to be the 18th Century. No one seems to be able to see him except his travelling companion, Frenchman Marquis de Custine, who he talks to. Together the two of them go around the museum, flitting between time as they go, gradually covered 300 years of Russian history.

    I was drawn to this film as I have recently had to install digital television in my house (just for 24!) and I figured that I might as well see what the channels had to offer. After working out that I had access to numerous shopping channels I also found that I had BBC4, the arts and history channel, and that it was to be showing this film. I was interested in it not for my love of Russian history but for the fact that it was done in one take and, for that reason, I quite enjoyed it.

    As far as plot goes, I really think you need to have an existing knowledge of Russian history as this film will not help you understand anything about it other than a passing impression. This was the case for me as I know next to nothing of the history, but I was still able to gleam some things about the political relationships between Russia and Europe as well as some of the main players. However it never got to the point where I was taken or engaged by the material; interested is perhaps a more fitting word to use - and that's still a good thing.

    Technically the film is gripping and very impressive. Much was made of Snake Eye's 20 minute one-take opening (even thought it was actually 3 takes) or Goodfella's seamless move from street to table, but this film blows them away. I cannot even imagine the sheer logistics involved in creating such an effect. It would be impressive if the film was all shot in one room with a few cast members, but this film moves around the museum with a cast of thousands and set pieces that vary from two people looking at paintings to a massive ballroom scene. I was held totally impressed by the whole film as the entire one take was delivered seamlessly, without flaw. For this reason the acting is impressive whether it is Dontsov's acerbic Frenchman or just some extra's - everyone had to get it right bang on time and they did.

    Overall this film will be a masterpiece if you have a good working knowledge and understanding of Russian history. However even if you don't know that much (like me), the technical aspect of this film will impress you no end even if the material is best seen as `interesting' at best.

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    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Shot in a single take. The first three attempts were cut short by technical difficulties, but the fourth was successful.
    • Goofs
      Many extras look to the camera and they quickly return to a default mark.
    • Quotes

      The Time Traveller: Sir. Sir. A pity you're not here with me. You would understand everything. Look. The sea is all around. And we are destined to sail forever, to live forever.

    • Connections
      Edited into Catalogue of Ships (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Mazurka
      (from opera "A Life For The Tsar")

      Music by Mikhail Glinka

      Performed by Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra

      Conducted by Valery Gergiev

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Russian Ark?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 19, 2003 (Russia)
    • Countries of origin
      • Russia
      • Germany
      • Japan
      • Canada
      • Finland
      • Denmark
    • Languages
      • Russian
      • Persian
    • Also known as
      • El arca rusa
    • Filming locations
      • Winter Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia
    • Production companies
      • The State Hermitage Museum
      • The Hermitage Bridge Studio
      • Egoli Tossell Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,048,997
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $29,022
      • Dec 15, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,691,860
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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