[go: up one dir, main page]

    Kalender veröffentlichenDie Top 250 FilmeDie beliebtesten FilmeFilme nach Genre durchsuchenBeste KinokasseSpielzeiten und TicketsNachrichten aus dem FilmFilm im Rampenlicht Indiens
    Was läuft im Fernsehen und was kann ich streamen?Die Top 250 TV-SerienBeliebteste TV-SerienSerien nach Genre durchsuchenNachrichten im Fernsehen
    Was gibt es zu sehenAktuelle TrailerIMDb OriginalsIMDb-AuswahlIMDb SpotlightLeitfaden für FamilienunterhaltungIMDb-Podcasts
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalIMDb Stars to WatchSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAlle Ereignisse
    Heute geborenDie beliebtesten PromisPromi-News
    HilfecenterBereich für BeitragendeUmfragen
Für Branchenprofis
  • Sprache
  • Vollständig unterstützt
  • English (United States)
    Teilweise unterstützt
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Anmelden
  • Vollständig unterstützt
  • English (United States)
    Teilweise unterstützt
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
App verwenden
  • Besetzung und Crew-Mitglieder
  • Benutzerrezensionen
  • Wissenswertes
IMDbPro

Swenigora

Originaltitel: Zvenigora
  • 1928
  • 1 Std. 8 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
1243
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Swenigora (1928)
DramaFantasie

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn old Ukrainian man protects and searches for a legendary treasure in the midst of political upheavals.An old Ukrainian man protects and searches for a legendary treasure in the midst of political upheavals.An old Ukrainian man protects and searches for a legendary treasure in the midst of political upheavals.

  • Regie
    • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
  • Drehbuch
    • Mikhail Ioganson
    • Yuri Tyutyunik
    • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Nikolai Nademsky
    • Semyon Svashenko
    • Aleksandr Podorozhnyy
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    1243
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Drehbuch
      • Mikhail Ioganson
      • Yuri Tyutyunik
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Nikolai Nademsky
      • Semyon Svashenko
      • Aleksandr Podorozhnyy
    • 9Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos22

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    + 16
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung12

    Ändern
    Nikolai Nademsky
    Nikolai Nademsky
    • Grandpa
    • (as N. Nademskiy)
    • …
    Semyon Svashenko
    Semyon Svashenko
    • Timoshka - first grandson
    • (as S. Svashenko)
    Aleksandr Podorozhnyy
    • Pavel - second grandson
    • (as L. Podorozhnyy)
    Polina Sklyar-Otava
    • Oksana
    • (as P. Otawa)
    • …
    Georgi Astafyev
    • Scythian leader
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Leonid Barbe
    • Monk
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Nikolay Charov
    • Pavel's Friend
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Vladimir Lanskoy
    • Spectator
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mariya Parshina
    • Timoshka's wife
    • (Nicht genannt)
    I. Selyuk
    • Ataman
    • (Nicht genannt)
    A. Simonov
    • Fat Officer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Vladimir Uralskiy
    Vladimir Uralskiy
    • Peasant
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Drehbuch
      • Mikhail Ioganson
      • Yuri Tyutyunik
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen9

    7,11.2K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    6lee_eisenberg

    the relationship between humans and nature

    The first part of Aleksandr Dovzhenko's trilogy (followed by "Arsenal" and "Earth") focuses on a man's hunt for treasure buried somewhere in a mountain, thereby showing a millennium of Ukrainian history. Beyond that, "Zvenigora" is about the relationship between humans and nature. Apparently, Dovzhenko was of the opinion that humanity's full submission to nature kept humans backwards, and that understanding and control of nature is required to advance (which they were supposed to have achieved with the October Revolution). When the movie got released, the Soviet magazine Kino (Cinema) called it bourgeois and nationalistic, although Dovzhenko was allowed to keep working after that.

    Anyway, worth seeing.

    For the record, Zvenigora is the Russian rendering of the name. In Ukrainian it's Zvenyhora, since in Ukrainian the Cyrillic G has a sound that's halfway between G and H.
    chaos-rampant

    Eyes turned into caves

    With Eisenstein - scientist of film, scholar - it was about synthesized image that opened eyes with conflict of the individual parts. It was a studied thing, architectural. This, on the other hand, is what they were fond of calling back then a 'cinematic poem'. So, yes, the stanza is evocative of soul, the rhythm seductive with earthly lyricism; you can see how all this is later revitalized again into poetry with Tarkovsky.

    Yet even though the heart is old world, dwelled by spiritual yearnings about the past and rural pageantry - the protagonist is an old man who escorts us through legend or memory - the eye is unerringly modern; it sees in ways that, now with hindsight, we can recognize as distinctly cinematic and only possible with the camera.

    So an old battle is diffused with dreamlike ambiance, reconstructed mechanically by actors moving like tinker-toys, but modern life is dazzling where shown; dynamic, disorienting. There are some amazing shots of electric city night humming with motion that I will keep with me. It is ultimately about these two worlds briefly coexisting in the same frame, one rushing against the other, clashing or making way for the locomotion forwards.

    Oh, there is the brief forray into civil war, and the brave, statuesque Red officer who must order his own firing squad. But elsewhere the Reds are shown to flee a village in defeat. The politics are ambivalent, mere footnote in the larger flow and pull.
    9Falkner1976

    Masterpiece from soviet Ukranian cinema. Controversial and vanguardist.

    Dovzhenko is certainly a controversial figure, especially during the 1930s and 1940s, for his ability to subjugate his Ukrainian identity to his sentiments as a staunch Stalinist. His behavior is at least suspicious, even considering the pressures he was subjected to.

    Zvenigora is one of his most clearly political films, which does not exclude ambiguities in the treatment of propaganda content. Obviously it could be uncomfortable for the director, among other things, to narrate the Ukrainian civil war from the side of the red army... when he had fought in the ranks of the whites.

    Dovzhenko did not hesitate to modify a script by Mikhail Johansen and Yurtyk (Yuriy) Yosipovich Tyutyunnik to suit Soviet tastes. The truth is that originally the text had to have clearly anti-Soviet overtones: written by two Ukrainians a poet and a militar who, seeing the turn that the story took in the hands of Dovzhenko, rejected any authorship of the result. It is especially cruel that Dovzhenko boasted in his autobiography that he had found a bourgeois and nationalist script, and adapted its content to Soviet doctrine, given that the two writers were shot shortly after, victims of the Stalinist purge. That Dovzhenko wrote his autobiography in 1939, obviously conditioned by the extreme political pressure of the time, is possibly no justification.

    The positioning of the film is very clear considering that in 1928 a decade of the Ukrainian cultural and linguistic revival came to an end, a movement that the Bolsheviks saw as dangerous and that they were quick to repress.

    The result is that Zvenigora has a clear Stalinist program, chanting industrialization, collectivization, the Sovietization of Ukraine.

    An old peasant who represents traditional and outdated values, tries to unearth the trasure of Ukraine, considered in the film as a symbol of the culture and history of the country, but associated at the same time with traditional and reactionary values.

    The old man has two grandchildren: the soviet hero of the day, played by the almost always disagreeable Semyon Svashenko, a hieratic, authoritanian, almost inhuman figurehead, but inevitably with the reason on his side; and a second grandson with a somewhat stupid appearance, attached to superstitions, representing the survival of Ukranian values and traditions in the young generation.

    The grandfather of course trusts the foolish grandson, and tells him stories about the buried treasure, about the origin of this treasure, which is in the stories of his country's past, which are narrated in the film.

    But the treasure must not be unearthed, and so a monk with a gloomy expressionist aesthetic watches over it.

    Civil war breaks out and the Bolshevik hero triumphs while the nationalist son flees to the West.

    The hero ends up discovering what Ukraine's real treasure is: its mineral wealth, a source of industrialization, and which the Soviet regime plundered for decades.

    The nationalist son emigrates to Prague, image of the excesses of the decadent Westerners, where he tries to seek funds from reactionary governments to unearth the treasure and free Ukraine from the Soviet yoke.

    The film ends with the grandfather trying to unearth the treasure again, prevented not by the gloomy monk, but by the train of modernity and industrialization. He is then won over to the cause, condescendingly accepted and forgiven in honor of his gray hair. Only the reactionary son, despicable enemy of progress, is insurmountable.

    The artistic value of the film is amazing. Zvenigora is Dovzhenko's most avant-garde and complex film, with an apparently chaotic but actually carefully planned structure, with images of ashtounding beauty and expressiveness and the brilliant editing characteristic of Soviet cinema of the time. Its noteworthy too because of the allegorical tone and symbolism, because of the disconcerting changes in style, because of an ambiguity clearly the result of the director's discomfort in the suffocating framework in which the government reduced him.

    Zvenigora is a clear reflection of the moral dilemma Dovzhenko faced, of his own contradictions, and the clash between his love for Ukraine and his Bolshevik allegiance.

    Still, or precisely because of this, the authorities did not like the film, basically because of its complexity, its intellectualism and its defiantly avant-garde character. If Dovzhenko believed that by sticking thematically to the regime's program he would get out of trouble, he was mistaken.

    It is not an easy film to watch: first of all it tells us about a social and political reality that requires familiarity with the topic, as well as about the personal situation of the director; on the other hand, the scenes may seem disjointed at first glance, the changes in style and rhythm are extraordinarily drastic, and in general there is a narrative far removed from a classic narrative. But it's no doubt a masterpiece, which rewards all efforts.
    6max4movie

    Ambitious But Flawed Surreal Epic

    Full review on my blog max4movies: Zvenigora is a Soviet silent black and white drama about a mysterious old man who spends centuries to find a legendary treasure buried in the middle of the Ukraine. The movie is essentially an epic fictionalized retelling of the country's history. Using recurring characters, who should be seen as symbols or embodied ideologies, several historical struggles are retold (e.g., the invasion of the Poles in the 18th century or the October Revolution in 1917). However, as there is no real plot to tie the several episodes together, the movie all too often feels fragmented and disjointed. Together with the symbolic dialogues and that at least some basic knowledge of Ukrainian and/or Soviet history is needed to understand certain scenes, the overall movie alienates many viewers. And while the production values and the cinematography are often impressive and the mix of historical events and surreal elements is ambitious, Zvenigora falls short in presenting a coherent journey.
    7tim-764-291856

    Fascinating for Silent & Russian film enthusiasts - others, probably not.

    Looking at the few reviews I've read, I'd like to strike a balance. I'd just bought the recently issued 3 film boxed set of Dovzhenko's War Trilogy, of which, this is the start. I bought the set as it was an absolute bargain, making it little more than the fairly well-known 'Earth' that I'd heard about and wanted to see.

    Firstly, I took 'cinematic poetry' to be just that, images and scenes that evoked a story rather than simply reciting it in the usual way. Thus heavy symbolism plays a huge part and I have to disagree with those that say one has to know the subject to appreciate it. I use that word, 'appreciate' rather than 'understand' and it is the very nature of the genre here, known as 'avant-garde' that further takes into realms of fantasy, or, pretentious waffle, if that's how you take it.

    Avant-garde is not my favourite genre either but when you consider that this is still the Silent Era - normality would be having a fixed camera, on a studio set and the actors moving around in front of it, in all but the most expensive and adventurous productions. The Russians, at this point, as well some notable German film-makers were doing much more and experimenting with double exposures, cutting, fading, all-sorts, simply to extend both the boundaries of their imagination and cinematic technology.

    Of course, film has moved on an awfully long way and so has people's entertainment. These moving images are both historical; a recreated scenario now wouldn't anywhere near the same authenticity - and human. As in stills photography of those days, it is capturing people and their lives that would have seemed so special and fascinating, marrying that up with story-telling would take longer as both film-makers and the public got used to this exciting, new medium. Marx unashamedly exploited artists of all kinds for propaganda purposes and these have, understandably, been seen in a bad light in the West, but thank goodness now, we are finally seeing them for what they are, not were - pioneering and hugely influential.

    I'm no historian or film expert and in effect, I haven't really reviewed the title itself but hopefully cast a light on it as a subject. However, I would say that the Mr Bongo reproduction, from the restored print is very good, with hardly a blemish and features a new(?) stereo orchestral score.

    Mehr wie diese

    Erde
    7,2
    Erde
    Arsenal
    7,2
    Arsenal
    Die Mutter
    7,4
    Die Mutter
    Das Ende von St. Petersburg
    7,3
    Das Ende von St. Petersburg
    Der Mann, der die Ohrfeigen bekam
    7,7
    Der Mann, der die Ohrfeigen bekam
    Der weiße Vogel mit dem schwarzen Fleck
    7,5
    Der weiße Vogel mit dem schwarzen Fleck
    Sensation in Morgan's Creek
    7,5
    Sensation in Morgan's Creek
    Amour fou
    7,3
    Amour fou
    Engel der Straße
    7,3
    Engel der Straße
    Die Generallinie
    7,2
    Die Generallinie
    Das Haus in der Trubnaja-Straße
    7,2
    Das Haus in der Trubnaja-Straße
    Last Chants for a Slow Dance
    5,9
    Last Chants for a Slow Dance

    Handlung

    Ändern

    Wusstest du schon

    Ändern
    • Wissenswertes
      The film was restored in 1973 at the Mosfilm studio with the assistance of Dovzhenko's widow, film director Yuliya Solntseva.
    • Alternative Versionen
      In 2011, the film was digitally restored and added with music score by the Oleksandr Dovzhenko National Centre. Running time of this version is 97 minutes. The music composed and performed by FUTUREthno, a Ukrainian-Polish band playing "ethnic music of the future". It was released in 2011, as part of the "Ukrainian Re-Vision" DVD-collection. Because the original Ukrainian intertitles were lost when they were cut and replaced with Russian intertitles in the mid-1930s, this restoration used Dovzhenko's script (published in "O. Dovzhenko's Works", 5 volumes, Kyiv: Dnipro, 1985) to reinstate the Ukrainian intertitles.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Geschichte(n) des Kinos: Une vague nouvelle (1999)

    Top-Auswahl

    Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
    Anmelden

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 23. Juni 1974 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Sowjetunion
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Dovzhenko Centre
      • Oleksandr Dovzhenko: DVD-trilogy
    • Sprachen
      • Noon
      • Russisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Der verzauberte Ort
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Vseukrainske Foto Kino Upravlinnia (VUFKU)
      • Odeska Kinofabryka
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 8 Min.(68 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

    Zu dieser Seite beitragen

    Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen
    • Erfahre mehr über das Beitragen
    Seite bearbeiten

    Mehr entdecken

    Zuletzt angesehen

    Bitte aktiviere Browser-Cookies, um diese Funktion nutzen zu können. Weitere Informationen
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    Melde dich an für Zugriff auf mehr InhalteMelde dich an für Zugriff auf mehr Inhalte
    Folge IMDb in den sozialen Netzwerken
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    Für Android und iOS
    Hol dir die IMDb-App
    • Hilfe
    • Inhaltsverzeichnis
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • IMDb-Daten lizenzieren
    • Pressezimmer
    • Werbung
    • Jobs
    • Allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen
    • Datenschutzrichtlinie
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, ein Amazon-Unternehmen

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.