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IMDbPro

La fin de Saint-Pétersbourg

Titre original : Konets Sankt-Peterburga
  • 1927
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
1,9 k
MA NOTE
Izrail Bograd in La fin de Saint-Pétersbourg (1927)
Drame

Un paysan vient à Saint-Pétersbourg pour trouver du travail. Il participe involontairement à l'arrestation d'un vieil ami devenu leader syndical. Le chômeur est arrêté et envoyé au combat pe... Tout lireUn paysan vient à Saint-Pétersbourg pour trouver du travail. Il participe involontairement à l'arrestation d'un vieil ami devenu leader syndical. Le chômeur est arrêté et envoyé au combat pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.Un paysan vient à Saint-Pétersbourg pour trouver du travail. Il participe involontairement à l'arrestation d'un vieil ami devenu leader syndical. Le chômeur est arrêté et envoyé au combat pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.

  • Réalisation
    • Vsevolod Pudovkin
    • Mikhail Doller
  • Scénario
    • Nathan Zarkhi
  • Casting principal
    • Aleksandr Chistyakov
    • Vera Baranovskaya
    • Ivan Chuvelyov
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    1,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Vsevolod Pudovkin
      • Mikhail Doller
    • Scénario
      • Nathan Zarkhi
    • Casting principal
      • Aleksandr Chistyakov
      • Vera Baranovskaya
      • Ivan Chuvelyov
    • 18avis d'utilisateurs
    • 15avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Rôles principaux16

    Modifier
    Aleksandr Chistyakov
    Aleksandr Chistyakov
    • A worker
    Vera Baranovskaya
    Vera Baranovskaya
    • His wife
    Ivan Chuvelyov
    Ivan Chuvelyov
    • Peasant boy
    Vladimir Obolensky
    • Lebedev
    • (as V. Obolensky)
    Sergey Komarov
    Sergey Komarov
    • His employer
    Viktor Tsoppi
    • Patriot
    Aleksei Davor
    Vladimir Fogel
    Vladimir Fogel
    • German Officer
    Aleksandr Gromov
    • Revolutionary
    • (as A. Gromov)
    Nikolay Khmelyov
    Nikolay Khmelyov
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    • German Officer
    Max Tereshkovich
    Mark Tsibulsky
      Anna Zemtsova
      Serafima Birman
      Serafima Birman
      • Lady with a fan
      • (non crédité)
      Vergiliy Renin
      • Officer-Agitator
      • (non crédité)
      • Réalisation
        • Vsevolod Pudovkin
        • Mikhail Doller
      • Scénario
        • Nathan Zarkhi
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs18

      7,31.9K
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      Avis à la une

      8Hitchcoc

      Those Darn Capitalists!

      I have to say that I was quite captivated by this film, and, of course, I found myself rooting for those poor Soviets. The symbol of the boiled potato which at first barely fed two people, finally being shared by the communists is quite striking. The film is visually wonderful. Both Poduvkin and Eisenstein have this thing for wonderful faces, with character and pain. Of course, everything is exaggerated. Those guys at the stock market, feasting on the spoils of the country while the proletariat slaved in the factories is brought to us with an incredible heavy-handedness. These must have been used extensively for propaganda purposes and must have had people up in arms. There are good performances and all the communist symbolism one could hope for. Unfortunately, not everything panned out quite so well a few years later, with the oppressed back under the heel of those who abuse power. See this film, however, and consider the plight of the poor of Russia, stuck under the Tsar and the fat cats.
      8stokke

      Pioneering portrayal of urban poverty

      Pudovkin makes use of revolutionary techniques, especially montage, as he narrates the story of the storming of the Winter Palace in Skt. Petersburg, 1917. The plot centres on two families, one rural and one urban, whose paths cross as they engage passionately in the uprising. The film is a masterpiece in silent film narration.
      10JohnSeal

      They don't make 'em like they used to

      The End of St Petersburg was another landmark of Soviet realist cinema, as good as if not better than Battleship Potemkin, Strike, or Storm Over Asia. It's incredibly powerful, with many absolutely stunning montage sequences that make today's quick cut edits look like like child's play in comparison. The language of cinema was invented in Russia and Germany by artists like Pudovkin, Eisenstein, Murnau, and Lang. Anyone interested in cinema history needs to see films like this one to appreciate how weak our current crop of auteurs truly are.
      8springfieldrental

      Pudovkin Focus on One Boy's Story on Bolshevik Revolution

      Soviet film directors Vsevolod Pudovkin and Sergei Eisenstein had a somewhat friendly rivalry. The two would sit down to a cup of tea and discuss the merits of each other's works and how they incorporated montage, the main editing style for the USSR filmmakers, into their movies. The Central Committee of the Communist Party awarded these two leading Soviet directors cash to produce separate films celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Bolsheviks' takeover of the Russian government in 1917.

      Pudovkin emerged first with his December 1927's "The End of St. Petersburg." The movie, concentrating on the years 1913 through 1917, solidified his reputation as the premier filmmaker in Soviet cinema. Pudovkin favored the melodramatic over the more formalistic style of his country's cinematic colleagues. His earlier 1926 "Mother" hit all the sentimental notes of a bonafide weepy despite its propagandist angle. Pudovkin continued his focus on the individual in "The End of St. Petersburg" by following a farmer's son who goes to the big city to seek employment. He gets a job at a smokey, unhealthy factory where he listens to a co-worker with Communist leanings espousing ideas to reform the government by giving the workers more rights. Our farmer boy ends up in a fistfight, is arrested and sent to the front lines of World War One.

      Pudovkin cross-cuts between the battle's insanity of bloody carnage with stock brokers who see the market ascending by the government's outrageous expenditures to support the costly war. The more Czar Nicholas spends on armaments, the more those military businesses make profits. Calling his cinematic technique "parallelism," or relational montage, Pudovkin drew stark contrasts between those benefiting from the conflict and those who died gruesome deaths because of capitalistic greed. The juxtaposition between the two worlds justify the Bolsheviks' reasons to stop the war, according to "The End of St. Petersburg." The Reds stopped the carnage as well as nationalized Russia's big greedy corporations because their owners could only think of think of huge profits in the midst of unnecessary deaths.

      Pudovkin's final images are of the worker's wife carrying an empty food pail that reflects the populace's dire poverty. She's seen walking through the splendor of the Tsar's Winter Palace, where untold millions of rubles were spent on such opulence in the face of starvation just outside its gates. "The End of Petersburg" projects a full-hearted endorsement of the sacrifice the overthrow of the Czar had cost in human lives. But Pudovkin gives a near guarantee in his images the revolutionary promises by the Bolshevik leaders will be kept.

      "The End of St. Petersburg" was the second film in what is regarded as Pudovkin's great trilogy celebrating the 1917 revolution overthrowing the crown and pays homage to the form of government Karl Marx would have been proud. But it is the Russian's cinematic skills in editing, cinematography and narrative threads that give excitement to modern film scholars the reason to continue to study his influential techniques.
      7vladislavmanoylo

      Starts slow, but continuously builds

      This films editing style lends, which can jarringly cut between shots with little regard to space and time, itself well to scenes with lots of tension or aggression. This makes the majority of the movie very intense by using images transitions to convey emotion, but the early parts suffer for it. Noticeable emphasis is placed on the angles and content of shots to convey mood, which frequently works as an effective metaphor in the narrative. But before the story is set up, the meaning of many juxtaposed shots floats away without having another element in the story to meaningfully attach to.

      I think too much time is spent early in the film on imagery the film deemed important, instead of offering context for the imagery. But after that it is quite enjoyable to watch. Montage used as metaphor relies heavily on a common ground between the language of images a film uses and the audiences understanding of them. But the impression and transition between images itself can enhance pacing and tension, and this greatly improves the movie. In particular the scenes where the younger protagonist attacks his employer is very powerful. In fact the content of the film after that point is enough to justify watching it. It takes characters to make a story enjoyable, and the film becomes aware of this and uses its editing to enhance the characters.

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      Histoire

      Modifier

      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        Vsevolod Pudovkin: The German officer.
      • Connexions
        Edited into Ten Days That Shook the World (1967)

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      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 13 décembre 1927 (Union soviétique)
      • Pays d’origine
        • Union soviétique
      • Langue
        • Aucun
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • The End of St. Petersburg
      • Société de production
        • Mezhrabpom-Rus
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        • 1h 25min(85 min)
      • Couleur
        • Black and White
      • Mixage
        • Silent
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.33 : 1

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