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DramaHistory

Ivan the Terrible, Part I

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Set during the early part of his reign, Ivan faces betrayal from the aristocracy and even his closest friends as he seeks to unite the Russian people. Sergei Eisenstein's final film, this is the first part of a three-part biopic of Tsar Ivan IV of Russia, which was never completed due to the producer's dissatisfaction with Eisenstein's attempts to use forbidden experimental filming techniques and excessive cost overruns. The second part was completed but not released for a decade after Eisenstein's death and a change of heart in the USSR government toward his work; the third part was only in its earliest stage of filming when shooting was stopped altogether.

Release Date : 1944-11-11

Language :Russian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : MosfilmTsOKS

Production Country : Soviet Union

Alternative Titles : Ivan the TerribleIvan the Terrible, Part OneIvan the Terrible, Part I

Cast

Nikolai Cherkasov

Character Name : Czar Ivan IV

Original Name : Николай Черкасов

Gender : Male

Lyudmila Tselikovskaya

Character Name : Czarina Anastasia Romanovna

Original Name : Людмила Целиковская

Gender : Female

Serafima Birman

Character Name : Boyarina Efrosinia Staritskaya

Original Name : Серафима Бирман

Gender : Female

Mikhail Nazvanov

Character Name : Prince Andrei Kurbsky

Original Name : Михаил Названов

Gender : Male

Mikhail Zharov

Character Name : Czar's Guard Malyuta Skuratov

Original Name : Михаил Жаров

Gender : Male

Amvrosi Buchma

Character Name : Czar's Guard Aleksei Basmanov

Original Name : Amvrosi Buchma

Gender : Male

Mikhail Kuznetsov

Character Name : Fyodor Basmanov

Original Name : Михаил Кузнецов

Gender : Male

Pavel Kadochnikov

Character Name : Vladimir Andreyevich Staritsky

Original Name : Павел Кадочников

Gender : Male

Andrei Abrikosov

Character Name : Boyar Fyodor Kolychev

Original Name : Андрей Абрикосов

Gender : Male

Alexander Mgebrov

Character Name : Novgorod's Archbishop Pimen

Original Name : Alexander Mgebrov

Gender : Male

Maxim Mikhaylov

Character Name : Archdeacon

Original Name : Maxim Mikhaylov

Gender : Male

Vladimir Balashov

Character Name : Piotr Volynetz

Original Name : Владимир Балашов

Gender : Male

Vsevolod Pudovkin

Character Name : Nikola, Simpleton Beggar

Original Name : Vsevolod Pudovkin

Gender : Male

Semyon Timoshenko

Character Name : Kaspar von Oldenbock, Livonian Ambassador

Original Name : Semyon Timoshenko

Gender : Male

Aleksandr Rumnyov

Character Name : The Stranger

Original Name : Aleksandr Rumnyov

Gender : Male

Pavel Massalsky

Character Name : Sigismond, King of Poland

Original Name : Павел Массальский

Gender : Male

Valentina Kuznetsova

Character Name : Smiling Woman in the Church (uncredited)

Original Name : Valentina Kuznetsova

Gender : Female

Sergei Stolyarov

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Sergei Stolyarov

Gender : Male

Anel Sudakevich

Character Name : Sigismond's court lady

Original Name : Анель (Анна) Судакевич

Gender : Female

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2022-06-06

Nikolay Cherkasov is superb in this speculative biopic of the infamous Tsar of all the Russias. Made towards the end of the Second World War, Sergei Eisenstein manages to create a magnificent depiction of just how this often barbaric, but actually rather shrewd and intelligent 16th century monarch inherited and retained his throne despite plots and intrigues from his court, his people, his nobles - basically, just about everyone. His goal? Well that is presented in an almost Stalinist style. To unite the Russian peoples and to protect them from the oppression of those who would invade their land and take away their freedoms. The anti-Nazi rhetoric is front, centre and potent. This is also a terrific historical epic with great attention to detail, some penetrating photographic techniques and a string supporting actors portraying friend and foe that all offers us a captivating, sometimes quite claustrophobic, illustration of a nation and a government that seems frequently but a hair's breath from insanity. Lyudmila Tselikovskaya is superb as his conspiring Tsarina Anastasia as is Serafima Birman as his even more duplicitous aunt Efrosinia who has designs on his throne for her own son Vladimir - who rather epitomises the theory of the inbred degenerate identified by Josef von Sternberg in "The Scarlett Empress" made ten years earlier. At times it has the theatrical style of a silent film; the lighting and staging and the eyes - indeed the facial expressions in general, combined with the rousing Prokofiev score convey much more than any mere dialogue ever could. A finer tale of power lust, debauchery and metal instability you will never see in film - and I loved it!