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Zhivoy trup

  • 1929
  • 1h 22min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,1/10
169
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Vsevolod Pudovkin, Grigory Borisov, and Pyotr Zhukov in Zhivoy trup (1929)
Drama

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaFjodor Protassow wants to divorce his wife, so that she can be happy with another man. But the church won't allow a divorce, so he fakes his own death, becoming a "living corpse".Fjodor Protassow wants to divorce his wife, so that she can be happy with another man. But the church won't allow a divorce, so he fakes his own death, becoming a "living corpse".Fjodor Protassow wants to divorce his wife, so that she can be happy with another man. But the church won't allow a divorce, so he fakes his own death, becoming a "living corpse".

  • Dirección
    • Fyodor Otsep
  • Guión
    • Lev Tolstoy
    • Boris Gusman
    • Anatoli Marienhof
  • Reparto principal
    • Vsevolod Pudovkin
    • Maria Jacobini
    • Viola Garden
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,1/10
    169
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Fyodor Otsep
    • Guión
      • Lev Tolstoy
      • Boris Gusman
      • Anatoli Marienhof
    • Reparto principal
      • Vsevolod Pudovkin
      • Maria Jacobini
      • Viola Garden
    • 3Reseñas de usuarios
    • 1Reseña de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes3

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    Reparto principal15

    Editar
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    • Fyodor Protasov
    • (as V. Pudovkin)
    Maria Jacobini
    Maria Jacobini
    • Yelizaveta Andreyevna Protasova (Liza)
    Viola Garden
    • Sasha (Liza's sister)
    Julia Serda
    Julia Serda
    • Anna Pavlovna
    Nato Vachnadze
    • Masha, a gypsy
    Gustav Diessl
    Gustav Diessl
    • Viktor Mikhajlovich Karenin
    Vera Maretskaya
    Vera Maretskaya
    • Prostitute
    Daniil Vvedenskiy
    Daniil Vvedenskiy
    • Artem'ev (The Good Spirit)
    • (as D. Vvedenskiy)
    Vladimir Uralskiy
    Vladimir Uralskiy
    • Petushkov
    • (as V. Uralsky)
    Boris Barnet
    Boris Barnet
    • Sailor in tavern
    Carola Höhn
    Carola Höhn
    Karl Junge-Swinburne
      Porfiri Podobed
      Porfiri Podobed
      Pyotr Repnin
      Pyotr Repnin
      Sylvia Torf
      Sylvia Torf
      • Dirección
        • Fyodor Otsep
      • Guión
        • Lev Tolstoy
        • Boris Gusman
        • Anatoli Marienhof
      • Todo el reparto y equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Reseñas de usuarios3

      7,1169
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      9mgmax

      Masterful account of a decent man alienated from grotesque society

      Tolstoy's The Living Corpse, once a very popular play (John Barrymore did it on Broadway), starts with what could be the premise of a legal expose— the main character, Protassow (played by the director V.I. Pudovkin), wants to divorce his wife so she's free to marry her aristocratic lover, but both church and civil divorce law conspire to make this simple matter between adults illogically difficult.

      But what it's really about is moral alienation; throughout the story, legal solutions to the dilemma present themselves, but Protassow finds them all so degrading, hypocritical, alien to his sense of decency that he just can't go along with the "sensible" thing to do in a corrupt society. In many ways it reminded me of the Coen Brothers' latest (and outstanding) film, A Serious Man, likewise driven by a wife's desire to divorce and marry her lover— Protassow is trying to be a serious man, an ethical and responsible man, but people keep turning up in front of him saying "Here's the sensible thing to do," which invariably really means, "Here's the sleazy thing it would be really, really convenient for me if you would corrupt yourself by doing."

      Film history, on no particular evidence, has awarded Pudovkin credit for most of this film, when in fact writer-director Fyodor Otsep/Fedor Ozep was a more prestigious figure at this time and it has clear similarities to his previous and next films, The Yellow Ticket and The Murderer Dmitri Karamasoff. Although one can see Pudovkinesque touches in some montage sequences, the style of the film is more subjectively psychological than didactically Soviet- Hegelian, mirroring the mental state of its main character.

      When he's dark and moody, the film is too— capturing a sick bourgeois society with a mordant eye for grotesqueries. When Protassow goes to a tavern, the first thing he sees is a sailor getting drunk while his child begs him to come home. And the three pimps who offer to help him by setting up a scene of adultery to facilitate the divorce are gargoyles straight out of George Grosz, particularly one with what looks like a double-wide set of teeth. The sinister politesse with which they try to transact their business is the equal of anything in Pabst or Lang for moral rot— and equally Weimar-Germanic in feel. (The film was actually shot in Germany by a Soviet production company.)

      But when he gets a taste of freedom from his intolerable situation— as when he visits a gypsy dance club— the style goes manic in a manner that looks much less like his fellow Bolsheviks, and far more like that of Ozep's old White Russian colleagues like Alexander Volkoff and V.I. Tourjansky, who were by then working in France. The rapid cutting suggests Volkoff's Kean or Gance's Napoleon (on which both Volkoff and Tourjansky assisted), while the hand-held camera-work suggesting exhilaration or agitation in several sequences reminds one not only of Napoleon but of Dmitri Kirsanoff's Menilmontant.

      To have made a film of such psychological acuity, in which the drama comes from inner states rather than outward events of the plot, was rare enough in the silent days, though others (notably Stiller and Pabst) certainly did it. But it is hard to think of another film in which those inner states are melded so completely with the style of the film, and in such a varied and visually innovative fashion. It's one of those late silents that leave you marveling at the medium as it existed— at its end.
      8topitimo-829-270459

      Some laws will always get broken

      Fyodor Otsep, the director who later traveled to Germany to film the exciting cinematic miniature adaptation of Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov" (the book 1880, the film 1931), was also apt in translating works by other authors into the medium of film. "Zhivoy trup" (The Living Corpse, 1929) is based on Tolstoy's popular play with the same title, released posthumously after the writer's death. With a play, Otsep is not forced to cut down the plot as he was with Dostoevsky's gigantic novel. Instead, he delivers a nicely told narrative, that is quite easy to follow, and features some cinematic merit to it as well.

      Vsevolod Pudovkin, the director of "The Last Days of St. Petersburg" (1927) among other notable films, plays the lead character Fyodor Protasov, who is unhappily married to Liza (Maria Jacobini), who is in love with another man (Gustav Diessl). Fyodor tries to do the right thing, and grant his spouse freedom. The only thing standing in the way is the law, which forbids divorces. So, what our resourceful protagonist decides to do is fake his own death. He does so, and what started out as a good idea, soon estranges him from society, and all of life's pleasantries.

      The film was a co-production with a German film company, and many of the cast are European, as opposed to Soviet actors. Soviet cinema of the 1920's was not always best at making intelligible adaptations of the country's enormous reserve of fine literature from the last century. However, Otsep's clear-cut storytelling manages to both carry the narrative, and to add psychological depth to the lead character. Pudovkin is great in the leading role, and another famed director Boris Barnet, with whom Otsep directed his debut "Miss Mend" (1926), is also seen in front of the camera.

      Soviet films could get away with societal commentary by setting themselves during the existence of imperial Russia. From today's perspective, you certainly read a narrative like this as a critique of strict marital laws. Yet the presence of the authority never fades away in the film, even if the protagonist tries to escape. Editing, cinematography, as well as set design all work well in this film, and this really does not feel like a piece of filmed theater. Not Otsep's best work perhaps, but a solid film.

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      Argumento

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        Featured in Legendy mirovogo kino: Vsevolod Pudovkin

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      Detalles

      Editar
      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 26 de marzo de 1929 (Rusia)
      • Países de origen
        • Alemania
        • Unión Soviética
      • Idiomas
        • Ninguno
        • Alemán
      • Títulos en diferentes países
        • The Living Corpse
      • Localizaciones del rodaje
        • Berlín, Alemania
      • Empresas productoras
        • Mezhrabpomfilm
        • Prometheus-Film-Verleih und Vertriebs-GmbH
        • Länderfilm GmbH
      • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

      Editar
      • Duración
        1 hora 22 minutos
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Silent
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 1.33 : 1

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