Commissar (movie)
|
Commissar (Комиссар) is a movie is based on one of Vassily Grossman's first short stories, In the town of Berdichev (В городе Бердичеве). The main characters were astonishingly played by two People's Artists of the USSR, Rolan Bykov and Nonna Mordyukova.
Maxim Gorky considered this four-page story one of the best about the Russian Civil War and encouraged Grossman to dedicate himself to literature. It also drew favorable attention from Mikhail Bulgakov.
History of the film
The movie's fate was tragic. It was shot in 1967 in the post-"Khrushchev Thaw" USSR, when the official policy of anti-Zionism was bordering on anti-Semitism. After making this movie, Askoldov lost his job, was expelled from the Communist Party, charged with social parasitism and exiled from Moscow, and banned from working on feature films for life. Mordyukova and Bykov, major Soviet movie stars, had to plead with the authorities to spare him of bigger charges. The film was shelved by the KGB for twenty years.
It was released only in the late 1980s due to glasnost policies, when the collapse of the Soviet regime was imminent. The movie won the special prize of the jury and the Silver Bear at the Berlinale 1988 and other awards.
Plot
- During the Russian Civil War, a pregnant female-commissar of the Red Army cavalry (Nonna Mordyukova) must give birth and is forced to stay with the family of a poor Jewish tailor (Rolan Bykov), his wife and six children...
Miscellaneous
- ISBN 6301884345
- Director and screenplay: Aleksandr Askoldov
- Starring: Nonna Mordyukova, Rolan Bykov, Lyudmila Volynskaya, Vassily Shukshin, Raisa Nedashkovskaya
- Music: Alfred Schnittke