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A Ascensão

Título original: Voskhozhdenie
  • 1977
  • 1 h 51 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,2/10
11 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
A Ascensão (1977)
Excerpt: Hiding from the Nazis
Reproduzir trailer3:41
2 vídeos
58 fotos
DramaDrama psicológicoGuerra

Dois partidários soviéticos em missão de coleta de alimentos enfrentam o frio do inverno, os ocupantes alemães e suas próprias mentes.Dois partidários soviéticos em missão de coleta de alimentos enfrentam o frio do inverno, os ocupantes alemães e suas próprias mentes.Dois partidários soviéticos em missão de coleta de alimentos enfrentam o frio do inverno, os ocupantes alemães e suas próprias mentes.

  • Direção
    • Larisa Shepitko
  • Roteiristas
    • Vasiliy Bykov
    • Yuri Klepikov
    • Larisa Shepitko
  • Artistas
    • Boris Plotnikov
    • Vladimir Gostyukhin
    • Sergey Yakovlev
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    8,2/10
    11 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Larisa Shepitko
    • Roteiristas
      • Vasiliy Bykov
      • Yuri Klepikov
      • Larisa Shepitko
    • Artistas
      • Boris Plotnikov
      • Vladimir Gostyukhin
      • Sergey Yakovlev
    • 55Avaliações de usuários
    • 44Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 4 vitórias no total

    Vídeos2

    Criterion Collection DVD Preview
    Trailer 3:41
    Criterion Collection DVD Preview
    The Ascent
    Trailer 1:36
    The Ascent
    The Ascent
    Trailer 1:36
    The Ascent

    Fotos58

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    + 51
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    Elenco principal15

    Editar
    Boris Plotnikov
    Boris Plotnikov
    • Boris Sotnikov
    Vladimir Gostyukhin
    Vladimir Gostyukhin
    • Nikolay Rybak
    Sergey Yakovlev
    Sergey Yakovlev
    • Pyotr Sych - Village elder
    Lyudmila Polyakova
    Lyudmila Polyakova
    • Avginya Demchikha
    Viktoriya Goldentul
    Viktoriya Goldentul
    • Basya
    Anatoliy Solonitsyn
    Anatoliy Solonitsyn
    • Pavel Portnov - the Nazi interrogator
    Mariya Vinogradova
    Mariya Vinogradova
    • Village elder's wife
    Nikolai Sektimenko
    Nikolai Sektimenko
    • Stas' Gamanyuk
    Anatoli Chebotaryov
    • German officer with glasses
    Sergei Kanishchev
    Sergei Kanishchev
    • Boy wearing Budyonovka
    • (as Serezha Kanishchev)
    Vasili Kravtsov
    • German officer
    Mikhail Selyutin
    Mikhail Selyutin
    • Fascist collaborator
    V. Sokolov
    • Politzai
    Leonid Yukhin
    Leonid Yukhin
    • Partisan detachment commander
    Aleksandr Zvenigorsky
    Aleksandr Zvenigorsky
    • German officer
    • Direção
      • Larisa Shepitko
    • Roteiristas
      • Vasiliy Bykov
      • Yuri Klepikov
      • Larisa Shepitko
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários55

    8,211.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    jitensmerchant

    A Christian parable from Soviet Russia!

    I saw "Ascent" in Bombay (dubbed in English) when I was 18, soon after the film was made. I have tried to see it subsequently EVERY TIME it was screened at the local Russian cultural centre. One of the first images in the movie is of a series of telegraph poles in a snowscape, one of which is out of alignment....and you realise that they look rather like the sign of the cross in the Russian Orthodox Church. This is a Judas-Christ parable, with several scenes "composed" like famous paintings of scenes from the Passion. The references and symbolism are endless....in the plot-line, the characters, the mise-en-scene --- the final hanging of the protagonist among "thieves" on a hill (which he has to climb) is a clear reference to Golgotha. The black and white photography is among the most beautiful I have seen; the acting is superb, especially the man playing the protagonist -- though making him a "special agent of the Red Army" is obviously a nod in the direction of Big Brother! I cannot begin to tell you how important this film probably is in world cinema....I use the word "probably" because I am only a film-lover, NOT a film-historian. However, if its available on DVD, PLEASE LET ME KNOW!!!!
    10magus-9

    deeply powerful, shamefully neglected

    Having just seen this, I find it hard to believe that it is not better known. This and the slightly-better-known, but almost-as-shamefully-neglected COME AND SEE (Klimov, 1986) must be two of the greatest war films. They are meaningful, powerful, incisive. THE ASCENT is also gifted with a sparingly-used, but brilliantly trenchant score by Schnittke.
    10rogermccarthy

    So powerful once will be enough

    This is one of the very, very few films that are so overwhelming that you are very unlikely to watch it more than once or twice in your lifetime (other examples are Claude Lanzmann's documentary Shoah and Come and See by the director's husband Elem Klimov - which covers much the same unbearable territory but in a very different way).

    I suppose this is just as well given the difficulty of ever seeing a print.

    Apparently it's extraordinarily overt Christian symbolism and admission that there were active Russian collaborators, ensured that it was hardly ever seen in the USSR - and of course post-soviet Russia has very little interest in films of that era.

    The one time I saw it in London was in a festival of Russian movies shown during the Glasnost era (i.e. probably c.1988) - however it apparently has been shown several times in the UK more recently so at least one subtitled print must exist here.

    As far as I know it has never been released in the west on DVD or video so if you haven't seen it, your best chance is probably to join a film society and endlessly nag them to find a print and screen it.
    10MacAindrais

    A Journey into the Soul

    The Ascent (1977)

    Larisa Shepitko is a name very few are familiar with. Her bright career as a director only lasted a single decade, ended abruptly by a tragic car accident. Despite her short career, she however managed to create some of the best Soviet films of her time. Her last film, The Ascent, is widely regarded as one of the finest Soviet films of the 1970s. Nevertheless, her work remained in obscurity throughout the years that followed, usually only available on rare and poor copies on video. That has now changed thanks to the folks at Criterion. They've released two of Shepitko's best works through their Eclipse department - Wings, and her penultimate masterpiece The Ascent.

    Set during the darkest days of WWII in snowy rural Russia, two partisans trudge their way across the land in search of food after their party is attacked by Nazi patrols. They're originally only to go to a nearby farm, but when they arrive they find it razed by the Germans. Not wanting to return empty handed, they continue on deeper into enemy territory. Along the way they must confront not only enemy soldiers, but the harsh conditions of the Russian plains, potential betrayal and their own souls.

    The movie does not fall into simplistic plot devices or destinations. It addresses difficult questions with painful rationality. It never takes the easy road or gives us comforting answers. The second half of the film is filled with moral dilemmas. Shepitko shows us the intimate horrors of war through the internal conflict between fellow Russians - those who collaborated and those who fought back. While she does show the collaborators as the clear heels, she nevertheless also shows why many turned to such tactics - survival.

    The film contains a number of religious references, particularly to the lead up to the crucifixion. This is a spiritual journey, into the hearts, souls, and minds of the two partisans and those they encounter. Shepitko and her cinematographer capture the journey in beautiful black and white photography. The camera moves in long shots, similar to the camera-work of another of Russia's greatest filmmakers, Andrei Tarkovsky. Shepitko, like many others, was clearly influenced by Tarkovsky's style, and the Ascent takes some of its rhythmic notes from Ivan's Childhood. It is a stunning film to look at, and does a fantastic job of capturing the cold and terrifying atmosphere of occupied Russia.

    Shepitko's husband would pay homage to her great film a decade later. Elem Klimov made his own war masterpiece with one of the greatest films I've ever seen - Come and See. The story and themes of that film were clearly influenced by The Ascent. Though that film is also a fairly obscure one, it received far more attention that any of Shepitko's films. That however acted as a bridge to Shepitko, and has been one of the best helps to keeping her work alive.

    The Ascent is a truly magnificent film, and rightly should be considered one of the best films of the 70s. It's stunning cinematography is inspiring; its mood is frighteningly authentic; and its lessons are unforgettable. It is, in any definition of the word, nothing less than a masterpiece. How unfortunate that Shepitko's career was cut short just as it was hitting its peak.
    10lasse-16

    A Soviet masterpiece

    In the Belarus of 1942, two Soviet soldiers are captured by Nazi-friendly Belarusians. In captivity, the attitude of the two men toward their fate differs greatly. One of the soldiers manages to find an inner strength and spirituality, incomprehensible to the other man. Larisa Shepitko's last film is one of the most beautiful war films in cinema history. The cinematography, by Vladimir Chuchnov, is incredible - particularly in the opening sequence, where long, slow, tracking shots depicting the solitude and almost desperate nature of winter landscape in rural Belarus set the mood perfectly. It is easy to draw comparison to Tarkovsky's films, even more so since Tarkovsky's alter ego Anatoli Solonitsyn has a small but important part in The Ascent. The acting is overall brilliant, especially by Boris Plotnikov, in the part of Sotnikov. The film reveals an old-fashioned belief in the strength of religious passion, which feels related to characters such as Dostoyevsky's Prince Myshkin, or Tarkovsky's Stalker. However, this is not a weakness of the film, but rather one of its greatest strengths. The religious content seems so honest, and human, that it is impossible not to be moved. The emotional richness of the film cannot be overstated; the answer is not as simplified as a short summary of the plot would make you think. The slow development of the characters, and the emphasis on their complicated relationships to each other, are somewhat reminiscent of The Commissar, another great Soviet film. The Ascent deserves a second watching, as well as a third, and a tenth. It continues to provide interesting ideas, beautiful images, and emotional complexity.

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    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      Official submission of Soviet Union for the 'Best Foreign Language Film' category of the 50th Academy Awards in 1978.
    • Citações

      Sotnikov: [Imprisoned, Sotnikov and Rybak are arguing whether to speak with Germans or not] We're soldiers. Soldiers. Don't crawl in shit. You'll never wash it off.

      Rybak: So then, to the grave - to feed the worms. Right?

      Sotnikov: That's not the worst that could happen. No. That's not what I'm talking about. Now I understand. I understand. The important thing is to be true to yourself.

      Rybak: Fool! You're a fool, Sotnikov. You graduated from the institute for nothing. I want to live! To live! To kill those bastards! Understand? I'm the soldier. And you're a corpse. All you've got left is your stubbornness - your principles!

      Sotnikov: Then go, go on living - without a conscience. It can be done.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema (2018)

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    • How long is The Ascent?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 2 de abril de 1977 (União Soviética)
    • País de origem
      • União Soviética
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Mosfilm [rus]
    • Idiomas
      • Russo
      • Alemão
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Ascent
    • Locações de filme
      • Mosfilm Studios, Moscou, Rússia(Studio)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Mosfilm
      • Trete Tvorcheskoe Obedinenie
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 51 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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