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IMDbPro

Arsenal

  • 1929
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Vladimir Stenberg and Georgii Stenberg in Arsenal (1929)
DramaWar

A soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.A soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.A soldier returns to Kyiv after surviving a train crash and encounters clashes between nationalists and collectivists.

  • Director
    • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
  • Writer
    • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
  • Stars
    • Semyon Svashenko
    • Georgi Khorkov
    • Amvrosi Buchma
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Writer
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Stars
      • Semyon Svashenko
      • Georgi Khorkov
      • Amvrosi Buchma
    • 19User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

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    Top cast15

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    Semyon Svashenko
    Semyon Svashenko
    • Timosh - the Ukrainian
    • (as S. Svashenko)
    Georgi Khorkov
    • A Red Army Soldier
    • (as G. Khorkov)
    Amvrosi Buchma
    Amvrosi Buchma
    • Laughing-Gassed German Soldier
    • (as A. Buchma)
    Dmitri Erdman
    • A German Officer
    • (as D. Erdman)
    Sergey Petrov
    Sergey Petrov
    • A German Soldier
    • (as S. Petrov)
    M. Mikhajlovsky
    • A Nationalist
    • (as Mikhajlovsky)
    Aleksandr Evdakov
    • Tsar Nikolas II
    • (as A. Evdakov)
    Luciano Albertini
    Luciano Albertini
    • Raffaele
    • (uncredited)
    Nikolai Kuchinsky
    • Symon Petliura
    • (uncredited)
    Pyotr Masokha
    Pyotr Masokha
    • Workman
    • (uncredited)
    Osip Merlatti
    • The actor Sadovsky
    • (uncredited)
    Nikolai Nademsky
    Nikolai Nademsky
    • Grandpa
    • (uncredited)
    Aleksandr Podorozhnyy
    • Pavloo
    • (uncredited)
    T. Wagner
    • A Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    Boris Zagorsky
    • Dead Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • Writer
      • Aleksandr Dovzhenko
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    7.22.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10lee_eisenberg

    all quiet on the Ukrainian front

    It goes without saying that silent cinema requires emphasis on the imagery. Alexander Dovzhenko's "Arsenal" is no exception. The look back at World War I over the past year should draw attention to this movie. Like Lewis Milestone's "All Quiet on the Western Front", this movie looks at the futility of war. The focus in the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising in 1918. Probably the most effective scene is the laughing gas: a man artificially laughs while surrounded by all manner of horror, a perfect metaphor for the disconnect between the image and reality of war.

    The only other Dovzhenko movie that I've seen is "Earth". I understand that "Arsenal" and "Earth" are the second and third installments of his Ukraine Trilogy. I'll have to see "Zvenigora", as well as the rest of Dovzhenko's movies. Despite the obvious propaganda, this is still a movie that you have to see just for the imagery if nothing else. Like Sergei Eisenstein's "Battleship Potemkin", it contains some of the most unforgettable images in cinema history. Definitely see it.
    Snow Leopard

    Filled With Interesting Images & Themes

    While often a bit obscure, this Dovzhenko classic is also filled with interesting and often thought-provoking images and themes. "Arsenal", as with his better-known feature "Earth", defies easy description. "Earth" is probably the more artistic of the two, but "Arsenal" is more complex, and it might also be a little closer - at least in places - to a conventional narrative.

    The first ten minutes or so of "Arsenal" are quite abstract, with a succession of mini-montages depicting a variety of subjects. It would be hard, and perhaps inadvisable, to assign a specific meaning to all of the symbols, but they are clearly meant to convey some general ideas that apply to the story that follows, which is set in the Ukraine as World War I (or the Great War) is coming to an end.

    The war sequences might be the most memorable part of the movie, and the chilling "laughing gas" sequence is a more compelling comment on war than are the great majority of complicated carnage-filled scenes in other movies.

    The main story starts with the demobilization, and it is clearly influenced by Dovzhenko's own perspective. He does his very best to resolve two seemingly contradictory priorities, with his devotion to the Ukrainian people and his support for the Soviet state. He uses all his skills, with interesting montages and other techniques, including some creative camera angles that would even have impressed Orson Welles.

    As politics, not all of it is convincing by any means, but as cinema, it is quite interesting, and at times it provides good food for thought. The specific issues considered in the film may be limited to their own time and place, but in asking what is best for his people, Dovzhenko also raises some broader issues that allow the movie to retain some relevance in later eras as well.
    10Flak_Magnet

    One of the 1920's Most Modernists Films - a Masterpiece

    Don't be discouraged by this Soviet film's age or obscurity - it is one of the finest movies ever made, and it stands alongside Carl Theodore Dreyer's "The Passion of Joan of Arc," as the most modernist film of the 1920's. This is a spectacular visual achievement, and its visionary conception of cinema is moderinism that we've still failed to catch up with. Unlike most recognized masterpieces of Soviet silent cinema (e.g. "The Battleship Potempkin," "Earth," "The End of St. Petersburg," etc.), however, "Arsenal" is a surprisingly approachable film, and its strangeness and abstraction are consistently fascinating. Originally intended as a propaganda film, "Arsenal" is the second component of director Alexander Dovzhenko's "Ukraine Trilogy," and it details an episode in the Russian Civil War (~1918) in which the Kiev Arsenal workers aided the Bolshevik army against the ruling Central Rada. Dovzhenko's approach is somewhat similar to Sergei Eisentein, in that he relied heavily on montage, but his pace was less frenetic, and his Expressionism was more exaggerated. As detailed in the film's academic commentary, Dovzhenko was previously a political cartoonist, and you can see traces of this background in "Arsenal." The characters in this film are caricatures, sometimes grotesque and sometimes funny. Similarly, there is a strangeness and remoteness in "Arsenal," which makes the film's few intentionally lucid passages quite dreamlike. The DVD commentary is concise and informative, and a terrific primer for the first time viewing. If you have any interest in silent cinema, modernism, or film as art, "Arsenal" is a film you SHOULD NOT MISS. ---|--- Was this review helpful?
    10M-Lunatique

    Cinema-Poetry

    Dovzhenko is the one who most differs from his brilliant colleagues, who based a considerable part of the structure of their films on a sophisticated construction of scene montage, Dovzhenko has always followed a more naturalistic line, pure dramatic narrative, poetry and visual beauty, master to its time in capturing natural rhythms, "Arsenal" is a modern classic with a visionary conception, oscillating between raw and immediate images like a documentary and also almost expressionist, exaggerated, playing with framing or inverted symmetries, employing quite varied forms of reach a state of abstraction. Just imagine a cinematographic composition inspired by the classic icons of the Byzantine orthodox code, that is, sacred figures painted on wood with a background without perspective, except that, in place of the sacred figure, a potentially revolutionary worker appears. Dovzhenko adapted the religious "aura" of the icons to the characters emanating from the Marxist dialectical materialism prevailing in the aesthetic-ideological vision of the party.

    Not only in the close-up portraits of the heroes, villains and victims of the historical process, but also of objects and nature. Surrounded by a halo resulting from a subtle out-of-focus, the foreground images - faces, flowers, mechanical objects - acquire a "corporeal significance", as defined by a Ukrainian critic, who crosses the Byzantine tradition and refers to the sacredness in pictorial representation. In Europe and in the beginnings of the Italian Renaissance.

    These images seem to contain a self-sufficient solidity, almost arousing a sense of touch in the viewer. Cinema-poetry, of course, that articulates itself with the urgency of the historical moment of the socialist revolution to produce an awareness of historical transition and overcoming, sustaining at the same time a fruitful and original subjectivity. The source, finally, to which filmmakers like Tarkovsky, Paradjanov and Sokurov referred.
    Lumpenprole

    fascinating method

    Arsenal seems to be a direct challenge to idea that films are intended to be digested in one sitting. Apparently even Sergei Eisenstein had a tough time making sense of the narrative of some of Dovzhenko's work. Arsenal's narrative only emerges if you concentrate on what you've seeing - comprehending and reassembling the puzzle of the images and movements that Dovzhenko has arranged to create causal and symbolic associations. Dovzhenko's camera is like the eye of God, taking in a half dozen settings, all of them connected though disparate in space and time. Dovzhenko also is perfectly comfortable inserting the fantastic (a talking horse or a faith in communism that deflects bullets) into his retelling of a historical event. I watched the film several times before the plot was clear to me.

    I'd recommend this film to anyone who wants to see a whole different approach to story telling. There are many great images and some of the acting is very good (the way Semyon Svashenko glances with disgust at one of the Ukrainian nationalists and slowly reaches out to touch his ribbon, feeling it's lightness, is an example), but there is no easy way of getting past Dovzhenko's style. You have to want to figure out this film. Dovzhenko's narrative technique is as unique as Robert Altman or Tsai Ming-Liang.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film concerns an episode in the Russian Civil War in 1918 in which the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising of workers aided the besieging Bolshevik army against the Ukrainian national Parliament Central Rada who held legal power in Ukraine at the time.
    • Goofs
      In a scene early in the film, a soldier lies dead, covered with sand, but the sand can be seen to rise and fall with the actor's breathing.
    • Connections
      Edited into Le tombeau d'Alexandre (1993)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 25, 1929 (Soviet Union)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Official sites
      • VUFKU
      • VUFKU
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Арсенал
    • Filming locations
      • Kyiv, Ukraine(street scenes, procession in front of St Sophia Cathedral)
    • Production companies
      • Odeska Kinofabryka
      • Vseukrainske Foto Kino Upravlinnia (VUFKU)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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