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Crime e Castigo

Título original: Prestuplenie i nakazanie
  • 1970
  • 3 h 41 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,8/10
1,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Crime e Castigo (1970)
Drama

Raskolnikov, um ex-estudante pobre, mata uma agiota e sua irmã. A polícia o suspeita após seus surtos. Sua família chega, seguida por pretendentes. Ele faz amizade com Sonia, filha de um esc... Ler tudoRaskolnikov, um ex-estudante pobre, mata uma agiota e sua irmã. A polícia o suspeita após seus surtos. Sua família chega, seguida por pretendentes. Ele faz amizade com Sonia, filha de um escrivão e prostituta, que o incentiva a confessar.Raskolnikov, um ex-estudante pobre, mata uma agiota e sua irmã. A polícia o suspeita após seus surtos. Sua família chega, seguida por pretendentes. Ele faz amizade com Sonia, filha de um escrivão e prostituta, que o incentiva a confessar.

  • Direção
    • Lev Kulidzhanov
  • Roteiristas
    • Fyodor Dostoevsky
    • Nikolai Figurovsky
    • Lev Kulidzhanov
  • Artistas
    • Georgiy Taratorkin
    • Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
    • Tatyana Bedova
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,8/10
    1,5 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Lev Kulidzhanov
    • Roteiristas
      • Fyodor Dostoevsky
      • Nikolai Figurovsky
      • Lev Kulidzhanov
    • Artistas
      • Georgiy Taratorkin
      • Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
      • Tatyana Bedova
    • 21Avaliações de usuários
    • 7Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos24

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    Elenco principal51

    Editar
    Georgiy Taratorkin
    Georgiy Taratorkin
    • Raskolnikov
    Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
    Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy
    • Porfiriy Petrovich
    Tatyana Bedova
    Tatyana Bedova
    • Sonya Marmeladova
    Viktoriya Fyodorova
    • Avdotya Romanovna
    Yefim Kopelyan
    Yefim Kopelyan
    • Svidrigaylov
    Evgeniy Lebedev
    Evgeniy Lebedev
    • Marmeladov
    • (as Yevgeniy Lebedev)
    Mayya Bulgakova
    Mayya Bulgakova
    • Yekaterina Ivanovna
    Irina Gosheva
    Irina Gosheva
    • Pulkheriya Aleksandrovna
    Vladimir Basov
    Vladimir Basov
    • Pyotr Luzhin
    • (as V. Basov)
    Aleksandr Pavlov
    Aleksandr Pavlov
    • Dmitriy Razumikhin
    • (as A. Pavlov)
    Yelizaveta Yevstratova
    • Alyona Ivanovna
    • (as Ye.Yevstratovna)
    Lyubov Sokolova
    Lyubov Sokolova
    • Yelizaveta Ivanovna
    • (as L. Sokolova)
    Inna Makarova
    Inna Makarova
    • Nastasya
    • (as I. Makarova)
    Valeriy Nosik
    Valeriy Nosik
    • Zametov
    • (as V. Nosik)
    Yuriy Medvedev
    Yuriy Medvedev
    • Lebezyatnikov
    • (as Yu. Medvedev)
    Evgeniy Lazarev
    Evgeniy Lazarev
    • Zosimov
    • (as Ye. Lazarev)
    Yuriy Sarantsev
    Yuriy Sarantsev
    • Ilya Petrovich - poruchik 'Porokh'
    • (as Yu. Sarantsev)
    Yuri Volkov
    Yuri Volkov
    • Nikodim Fomich
    • (as Yu. Volkov)
    • Direção
      • Lev Kulidzhanov
    • Roteiristas
      • Fyodor Dostoevsky
      • Nikolai Figurovsky
      • Lev Kulidzhanov
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários21

    7,81.5K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9lesdroits

    chilling yet beautiful --a masterwork

    This Russian version -- didn't expect that much, especially being a 1970 movie - but it was free as an Amazon prime member. And Wow! - so much more advanced than most 1970 movies stateside-- such realism, such minute observations, so well capturing the essence of the lives and small homes (hovels often) and wonderfully local faces. Unbelievably great choice in cast-- and the best of all is Georgi Taratorkin who plays Raskolnikov. First, he has a fascinating, beautifully chiseled face that alone is enough to holds your interest throughout. And what a masterful job he does, as if he is actually living through all the torments and various other emotions that the character went experienced. Not a false step (to the extent I can tell being dependent on subtitles)

    I see on IMDb that Crime and Punishment is being made again in US (there many versions -- as with Anna Karenina, they just keep redoing ), but do not believe any could beat this film. Chilling yet beautiful.

    By the way, IMDb says it is black and white. What I've watched on Amazon is in warm, rich, authentic-appearing color -- if colorized, not detectable as such.
    8larryavr

    If you find a better adaptation of this classic, let me know.

    I recently read the novel for the first time and loved it. But I really wanted to hear the characters speak in Russian and not in the faint British accent I imagined reading my English edition. I don't speak or read Russian, so a film with subtitles was my only option. Having no experience with Soviet-era cinema, and as a child of the Cold War, I'll admit I went into the viewing with far too many suspicions of this "state sponsored" adaptation. I was pleasantly surprised by the obvious respect with which the story was treated.

    The film perfectly captured almost every nuance of the novel, such as Rodya's claustrophobic physical and mental existence as well as the bleakness of St. Petersburg's slums. The characters were all faithfully portrayed, except maybe for Svidrigailov. He seemed to be portrayed more sympathetically than I think Dostoevsky would have intended. While he certainly was a tragic figure, I didn't read him as being quite as gallant as he appeared in the film.

    My only other gripe is one I've read on here somewhere else. There is no hint of the redemption Raskolnikov experiences which is so essential to the whole story. But don't let this, or any of the other comments on IMDb about the film's pace or length deter you from watching it. Anyone who loves the novel and yearns to hear the story told in its native tongue will find the experience a rewarding one.
    8lee_eisenberg

    no crime, and don't punish it

    First, I should admit that I have never read the novel on which this movie is based. Therefore, I don't know how well I can review the movie. But even so, I will say that "Prestupleniye i nakazaniye" (called "Crime and Punishment" in English) really chills you. We see how Raskolnikov completely loses his mind in the aftermath of his deeds. The black and white photography - plus the bleak, eerie setting - help give that feeling.

    I don't know whether or not this is the best adaptation ever of Dostoyevsky's novel, but it's certainly not one that you're likely to forget. It's as chilling as St. Petersburg looks. I definitely recommend it.

    PS: the name Rodion Raskolnikov describes his character. "Rodion" comes from the word meaning birth (implying rebirth), and "Raskolnikov" comes from the word meaning schism (implying mental breakdown).
    9clanciai

    The Raskolnikov story correctly rendered by Russians.

    It is very interesting to compare this Russian version of "Crime and Punishment" with the Julian Jarrold version of 2002, since both are so outstandingly excellent, but in different ways. Also here all the actors' performances deserve nothing but praise, although some more than others, especially Georgi Taratorkin as Raskolnikov: he couldn't be more perfect, exactly as he is described in the novel, acting convincingly feverish enough all the way without overacting, while Sonia, Katerina and Dunia also are very well found, better than in the BBC production. The settings are also more than perfect, especially the den of Raskolnikov, better than in any other film and communicating precisely the correct atmosphere of the book. Rasumichin, Porfiry, the mother and Luzhin are less apt, Luzhin too much of a cad, Rasumichin too much dressed up, the mother like any mother and Porfiry as formal as a dummy. Here we enter the lacks of this film: it never really comes to life, it lacks the necessary dramatic touch, it is too stiff and formal, the lack of any music except sound effects gives it a certain sterility, and the scenography is entirely without imagination, like a formal theatre setting in the suburbs, although it's the same St. Petersburg so overwhelmingly well rendered in the BBC film. Still, Georgi Taratorkin is the best Raskolnikov you'll ever see, and you can't make a less than excellent movie on such a major masterpiece of world literature. Like the English film, the piety towards the original proves rewarding enough to to make the film a feature of paramount excellence.
    9topitimo-829-270459

    Dostoevsky is Notoriously Hard to Adapt. Gray Fever Dream Has Merits.

    Many scholars agree, that Fjodor Dostoevsky is a writer, whose works are notoriously hard to adapt into movies. This is not solely due to the length of many of his later novels, but because of the author's psychological storytelling, and the importance of inner monologue in his works. I've read "Crime and Punishment" twice, I really like it, and it's my favorite of his books next to "The Brothers Karamazov". If the adaptations of "Karamazov" have a nasty way of turning into simplified "whodunnits", the adaptations of "Crime and Punishment" are often tempted to become "perfect crime" narratives, if not straight-up Columbo episodes.

    This being said, I usually have a fondness for adaptations of this novel, just like I have toward adaptations of Shakespeare's Hamlet or MacBeth. Even if the films are not masterful, they might still greatly benefit from the source material and stand out above average. The version by Sternberg and Peter Lorre is comically short, but has a certain charm. The same goes for the modernized treatment of Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki. Just because adapting Dostoevsky is hard, doesn't mean you can't try it.

    This adaptation, by director Lev Kulidzhanov, is often hailed as one of the best "Crime and Punishment" adaptations. And it is very good. Due to the lengthy duration clocking in at almost four hours, this film has time for proper character development and thorough depiction of Raskolnikov's agony. And the visuals of the whole thing serve it great. This film is black and white, but most often it's really nothing but gray in its color palette, making it feel like a fever dream that refuses to end. It's dead calm and tormenting, which fits the novel perfectly.

    The lack of a novel-like storyteller in a movie is fixed by giving the characters long monologues and dialogues, that can last small eternities. This really adds some feel of the book to the film. There are minor differences and things omitted from film, but this is always the case with adaptations, and not against the law. If some versions show Raskolnikov commit his crime mostly because of his Nietzche-like super-mensch theories, this adaptation stresses the financial difficulties that he faces. I love the look of his apartment in this film, with his living quarters being much smaller than in some western adaptations. When the protagonist has visitors, which is nearly always, it feels like they are really pressing towards his skin. This film is very claustrophobic.

    My favorite character in this adaptation, and in most adaptations, is Porfiri, who is played in quiet determination by Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy. This was my favorite performance in the film, the character is sparingly used and many of his lines are kept in tact from the novel. The Raskolnikov in this version is one of the most distant, and least-relatable I have seen in any film. This might have to do with the subtle way, that the lead performance has been written and directed. He has many great scenes too.

    In conclusion, in all areas of film-making, this Soviet film has merits to it. Though it's not perfect, and no adaption can beat the book, it's dark, ambitious, made with determination and appreciation for the source text.

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    Enredo

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    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Tatyana Bedova's debut.
    • Citações

      Marmeladov: Poverty is no vice and that's the truth. And drunkenness is no virtue either. But misery, my dear sir, that's what is immoral!

    • Conexões
      Featured in Legendy mirovogo kino: Inna Makarova

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    • How long is Crime and Punishment?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 28 de setembro de 1970 (União Soviética)
    • País de origem
      • União Soviética
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • arabuloku.com
    • Idioma
      • Russo
    • Também conhecido como
      • Crime and Punishment
    • Empresas de produção
      • Kinostudiya imeni M. Gorkogo
      • Mosfilm
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      3 horas 41 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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