Ivan (1932 film)
Ivan (Ukrainian: Iвaн, Russian: Иван) is a 1932 Soviet drama film directed by Alexander Dovzhenko. After the critical lambasting of his film Earth by the Soviet authorities, Dovzhenko returned with a more popular iteration of its main motifs. Much like Earth, Ivan concerns itself with the natural rhythms of country life, disrupted by the beat of looming industrialisation.[1]
Ivan | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alexander Dovzhenko |
Produced by | Lev Kantorovich |
Written by | Alexander Dovzhenko |
Starring | Petro Masokha Stepan Shagaida Konstantin Bondarevsky Dmytro Holubynsky Alexander Khvylya |
Music by | Boris Lyatoshinsky Yuli Meitus Igor Belza |
Cinematography | Danylo Demutsky Yuriy Yekelchik Mikhail Glider |
Edited by | Ganna Chernyatsina |
Distributed by | Ukrainefilm |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Ukrainian |
Alexander Dovzhenko received a Special Jury Prize for the film at the 2nd Venice International Film Festival.[2]
Cast
- K. Bondarevsky as Young Ivan (as Konstantin Bondarevsky)
- Dmitry Golubinsky as Secretary
- Elena Golki as Mother of Killed Worker (as Elena Golik)
- Maksim Gornatko
- Aleksandr Zapolsky as Supervisor (as Alexander Zapolski)
- Pyotr Masokha as Ivan Guba (as Peter Masokha)
- Nikolai Nademsky
- Peter Pastushkov
- Stepan Shagaida as Stepan Vasiliyevich, the foreman
- Stepan Shkurat as Stepan Iosovich Guba, the idler
References
- Информация о фильме
- "Ivan". Encyclopedia of Native Cinema. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
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