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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
    Anna Selivanova
      Max Tereshkovich
      Mark Tsibulsky
        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

        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.
        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.
        chaos-rampant

        The singing, collective eye

        Pudovkin, it is said, would visit Eisenstein late at night to discuss theories of montage. They were both key figures of the movement, but polar opposites; so one can imagine how heatedly - how excitedly, at the prospect of discovery - the ideas must have been debated back and forth, and is montage the means of collision between images that scream or the scaffold that builds into song?

        But whereas Eisenstein was grounded into Freud, Joyce, Banshun and Japanese poetry, Pudovkin - as a British journalist puts it - argued theory like a schoolteacher. So, it makes some sense that he hasn't endured in critical thought like his more famous counterpart, or like Vertov and Dovzhenko. But having read some of Pudovkin's writings, he was indeed one of the great engineers of cinema, at the time when cinema was truly engineered; his theory of human perception as a series of edits, thus how the objective world is arranged movie-like into the mind into a narrative, has far-reaching imports. It implies a way out of the editing mind, and back into the eye.

        It's something that I have been looking for in my meditation - how to extinguish these lapses, edits, of mind narrative so that only the silence behind the forms echoes. This is a literal thing btw, I'm not talking about a fancy metaphor. In meditation, you become tangibly aware of intruding thoughts as narratives, lapses during which the surrounding reality is dimmed into a haze. Back into Pudovkin though.

        But with the advent of sound, he petered out; the last significant experiment we find is in his first talkie, Deserter, and it is about subjective sound. Here though, he still mattered. The two friends and theoretical rivals were commissioned by the Soviet state to make films that commemorated the ten years since the Revolution. Eisenstein turned out a film on the grand scale, Pudovkin on the other hand something more intricate.

        Oh, eventually there is battle and revolutionary spirit rippling through a society of oppressed, exploited proles. Flags are waved from balconies, the streets festively rained with paper as the Reds turn the tide against both Germans and White Russians. By the end, the enemies of the people are shown to have been really few, a handful of pathetic officers scattered in a field. St. Petersburg turns eventually, joyously for the film, into the City of Lenin.

        But there is stuff that matters before we get into the simple paean, all pertaining to the mechanisms that control the eye.

        I don't know what you will be looking to get out of these films, but to me they matter because these people, erudite engineers of film, were hard at work devising ways by which to unfetter the eye from narrative. Oh, the perception they enabled was the farthest thing from true, but we can discard the politics and focus on the actual engineering; how to make film in a way that seeing and what is seen become one, unmediated by any thought between them?

        Look, for example, how Pudovkin edits the scene with the young man at the police headquarters, arguing the release of a man from the same village as he; individually the images may not make perfect sense, the intertitle seems to be a disembodied voice that belongs to no one in particular, but it precisely this scaffold rigged for the eye that makes it resonate. It is only upon seeing, and seeing only, that it translates.

        Painterly beauty elsewhere, fields of hay rolling in the distance, the shots of windmills and overcast skies that predate later poetics of Soviet cinema. Or, once in the city, the stark desolation in empty cityscapes that could only be so purely expressed by a film tradition, rooted in Marxist politics, that rejoiced at the sight of masses and crowds.

        It is fine, fine stuff. As with other Soviet films of the era, I recommend that you see as 'films', not as 'agitprop' from where we, enlightened viewers of the West, are called to salvage a few cinematic notions of historic importance. Oh yes, the imports of good and evil are simple-minded, but were they any more intricate with the expressionists in Germany or contemporary Hollywood?
        Snow Leopard

        Very Well-Crafted, & A Fine Companion to Eisenstein's "October"

        This Pudovkin classic and Eisenstein's "October" were both commissioned to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the 1917 revolution. The two movies work very well as companions for one another, since Eisenstein concentrated on the major historical events of the revolution, while "The End of St. Petersburg" looks at the era through a story involving some everyday characters. Eisenstein's movie is deservedly well-known, and it is probably the better of the two, but Pudovkin's well-crafted film is a fully worthy companion, and it deserves to be better remembered.

        The story is well-conceived and, at least given the perspective from which it was made, it works well. The main character is a young man from the country who heads to the great city of St. Petersburg to find work, and who instead learns a series of unexpected and not always pleasant lessons. As the young man, Ivan Chuvelyov does not have a lot of screen presence, but he does convey sincerity and honesty.

        The other two major characters are a proletarian agitator played by Aleksandr Chistyakov, and his strong-willed wife, played by Vera Baranovskaya. Both of them have good presence, and make their characters stand out. The roles are not really all that complex, but they are used well in the story.

        It's understood that it is often necessary to set aside political perspectives in order to appreciate Soviet-era Russian movies. There are a few somewhat heavy-handed details here, mostly in the portrayal of capitalists, and occasionally in the titles. But you could easily find techniques used in today's Hollywood movies that are much more labored or manipulative. Further, movies like "The End of St. Petersburg" go a long ways towards explaining how and why Russia turned to Leninism and communism with such determination.

        Perhaps movies like this will now be of interest only to those with an enthusiasm for history, but for those who do take such an interest, it should not be a disappointment.

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        Centres d’intérêt connexes

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        Drame

        Histoire

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        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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