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Ivan le terrible

Original title: Ivan Groznyy
  • 1944
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Ivan le terrible (1944)
Trailer for Ivan the Terrible
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
75 Photos
DocudramaBiographyDramaHistory

During the early part of his reign, Ivan the Terrible faces betrayal from the aristocracy and even his closest friends as he seeks to unite the Russian people.During the early part of his reign, Ivan the Terrible faces betrayal from the aristocracy and even his closest friends as he seeks to unite the Russian people.During the early part of his reign, Ivan the Terrible faces betrayal from the aristocracy and even his closest friends as he seeks to unite the Russian people.

  • Director
    • Sergei Eisenstein
  • Writer
    • Sergei Eisenstein
  • Stars
    • Nikolay Cherkasov
    • Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
    • Serafima Birman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sergei Eisenstein
    • Writer
      • Sergei Eisenstein
    • Stars
      • Nikolay Cherkasov
      • Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
      • Serafima Birman
    • 67User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Ivan the Terrible
    Trailer 1:31
    Ivan the Terrible

    Photos75

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    Top cast20

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    Nikolay Cherkasov
    Nikolay Cherkasov
    • Czar Ivan IV
    Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
    Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
    • Czarina Anastasia Romanovna
    Serafima Birman
    Serafima Birman
    • Boyarina Efrosinia Staritskaya
    Mikhail Nazvanov
    Mikhail Nazvanov
    • Prince Andrei Kurbsky
    Mikhail Zharov
    Mikhail Zharov
    • Czar's Guard Malyuta Skuratov
    Amvrosi Buchma
    Amvrosi Buchma
    • Czar's Guard Aleksei Basmanov
    Mikhail Kuznetsov
    Mikhail Kuznetsov
    • Fyodor Basmanov
    Pavel Kadochnikov
    Pavel Kadochnikov
    • Vladimir Andreyevich Staritsky
    Andrei Abrikosov
    Andrei Abrikosov
    • Boyar Fyodor Kolychev
    Aleksandr Mgebrov
    • Novgorod's Archbishop Pimen
    Maksim Mikhaylov
    • Archdeacon
    Vladimir Balashov
    Vladimir Balashov
    • Piotr Volynetz
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    Vsevolod Pudovkin
    • Nikola, Simpleton Beggar
    Semyon Timoshenko
    • Kaspar von Oldenbock, Livonian ambassador
    Aleksandr Rumnev
    • The Stranger
    • (as Aleksandr Rumnyov)
    Pavel Massalsky
    Pavel Massalsky
    • Sigismond - King of Poland
    Yuri Pomerantsev
    Ada Voytsik
    Ada Voytsik
    • Elena Glinskaya
    • Director
      • Sergei Eisenstein
    • Writer
      • Sergei Eisenstein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    7.711.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7trippycheez

    Eisenstein lags behind

    Perhaps if I had not watched von Sternberg's SCARLET EMPRESS the day before I watched IVAN THE TERRIBLE, I would have appreciated Eisenstein's film more.

    SCARLET EMPRESS is von Sternberg's own historical Russian epic: Catherine the Great (played by Marlene Deitrich) rises to power despite conspiracies against her--conspiracies much like the ones that face Ivan in Eisenstein's film. The films are remarkably similar, and Eisenstein's influence on von Sternberg's lighting and montage sequences could not be more apparent.

    Unfortunately, IVAN THE TERRIBLE is light years behind SCARLET EMPRESS in terms of the integration of sound with image, humanistic characterizations, and nuanced (as opposed to exaggeratedly theatrical) acting styles. If I had to guess, I'd say IVAN THE TERRIBLE was made ten years before SCARLET EMPRESS. In fact, it was made ten years after.

    I'm a big fan of Eisenstein's BATTLESHIP POTEMPKIN, and as a student of Russian history and culture, I expected IVAN THE TERRIBLE to be a thoroughly engaging film. Instead it seemed a primitive effort: a move backward for a man who excelled at silent storytelling but couldn't evolve along with cinema. Of course, this IS Eisenstein, and IVAN is a very intelligent and well-crafted film, but viewed alongside its contemporaries, its shortcomings become all too apparent.
    flasuss

    Stalinist Shakespeare

    If Alexander Nevsky was a filmed opera, this one, the first part of Eisenstein's incomplete trilogy about the title character, looks more like a Stalinist version of a Shakespere play, with a lot of conspiracy and characters so desirous for power that are willing to do whatever it takes, but manichaeist and with almost undisguised propaganda of the infamous Russian dictator. Exactly for being theatrical, it is too formal, but it is so intense that it is impossible to be indifferent, the visual composition is extraordinary, using very well the light-and-shade game typical of the German Expressionism, the alternation between very open shots and close ups, and very rich costumes and set decoration. In the end, although it is not perfect, is a remarkable film that deserves all the praise it received.
    9OttoVonB

    Eisenstein's Baby

    On a backdrop of intrigue, murder and betrayal, Prince Ivan conquers enemies and becomes the first Czar of all Russia, at the cost of his own soul.

    Eisenstein's name and reputation loom over film history in such a forbidding way that you would be forgiven for deeming his work impenetrable by modern standards, yet while his silent epics are so seminal as to be hard to evaluate objectively, his late talking films can be hugely rewarding viewing, even to more casual film-goers. As a summation of his artistic evolution and scholarship, they are no less treasurable or significant than Battleship Potemkin, yet they have a more compelling story to tell.

    Ivan The Terrible was to be a trilogy, of which only parts 1 and 2 were completed before their creator fell into disfavor with Stalin. Yet parts 1 and 2 are rich enough that together they form a perfect story ending on a chilling note. On to part 1 then...

    Part 1 tells the story of Prince Ivan from young hopeful to warlord and recluse, before he truly accepts his calling. It is an incredibly romanticized tale, and formally, a relic of a time long gone, one that perhaps only ever existed in Eisenstein's mind. His was a unique visual sensibility and the Ivan films are full of layered, meticulously composed and designed shots: characters scurry like rodents through claustrophobic tunnels, the look is at times so expressionistic as to evoke where The Cabinet of Dr Caligari might have evolved. It is both familiar and horribly alien, like the nightmare it later confirms itself as in part 2.

    Given the conflicting emotions evoked - heroism with oppression, epic scale but suffocating formalism - you would do well to brace yourself through this one and remember that only once you've seen both parts will it all make terrible sense. Only then will you appreciate the unique genius at work here.

    One cannot distinguish between the two Ivans for one cannot exist without the other, and together, they form one of the best films ever made.
    10zetes

    My God, I wasn't expecting it to be THAT good

    Before I new much about him, when I used to see the box for Alexander Nevsky on the Foreign shelf at my local video store, I always misread Eisenstein's name, transforming it into Einstein. Well, Einstein suits him just as well, for what Albert Einstein was to science Sergei Eisenstein is to the cinema. Witness Battleship Potemkin, possibly the most rousing film ever made. Today, nearly 80 years after it was made, it still has the power to inspire revolution. Its amazing montage editing style may have died with silent cinema (although there are at least two directors today who are somewhat similar: Shinya Tsukamoto and Darren Aranofsky), but it will never be forgotten.

    When Eisenstein moved to sound, he realized that rapid montage would not work in the new medium. He adapted his style, perfecting a new one. Alexander Nevsky and the two Ivan the Terrible films come off to many people as stale historical epics. To me, they come off as the very peak of that genre. Usually I do find historical epics stuffy, but the direction, acting, writing, cinematography, and music of these three films are exquisite, so far beyond anything that I've ever seen that these films stir me nearly as much as Potemkin does.

    Ivan the Terrible I is a bit confusing in its plot to begin with, but you have to stick with it. First off, there are many, many characters. A great many are not mentioned by name, and most of the rest are only named on rare occasions. But Eisenstein familiarizes us with the characters' faces. These faces are perfectly chosen and lighted spectacularly. The light is so harsh that every crag in a person's face is clear, and noses cast foreboding shadows. The way time progresses in this film is without much warning, and one problem I encountered was identifying Ivan himself. I did not catch on at first when the first sequence ended and the second sequence began, and Ivan, in the second sequence, has a beard. Once you realize that, though, you're home free. That beard serves as a great identifier throughout the film (and is used in many ways by Eisenstein).

    I was expecting to like this film, but I found myself obsessed with this utter masterpiece. 10/10
    8Steffi_P

    "If he is strong enough, all will recognise him"

    Despite spending his career under an increasingly restrictive regime which regarded cinema as a tool to propagate the government line and needed only the slightest excuse to censor or ban pictures, Sergei Eisenstein always had his own ideas and agendas which shone through the propaganda. Ivan the Terrible was commissioned by the Soviet government to glorify a dead dictator, with whom the living dictator (Stalin) identified, but in Eisenstein's hands it became much more than that – one of the greatest studies of power in the history of cinema.

    Ivan the Terrible is primarily concerned with the conflict between the institutional power of the system and the charismatic power of individuals. This theme is all set up in the opening scene. It begins with a shot of the crown, and then goes through the various rituals of Ivan's coronation, whilst in the background various dignitaries whisper their doubts to each other. Ivan's face is not even shown until the crown goes on his head. It's clear at this point that we are seeing the creation of a symbolic figurehead tsar – the rituals and symbols of power mean more than the man himself. However, when Ivan begins to speak he talks of uniting Russia and ruling with an iron fist. From the series of reaction shots, we are told straight away that the assorted aristocrats, state officials and clergymen wanted a puppet ruler, and are now horrified. Throughout the film Eisenstein uses this kind of cinematic shorthand to reveal the shifting loyalties and private thoughts of characters. More than any other film I can think of, you can understand what is going on in Ivan the Terrible without needing to understand the dialogue or see the subtitles – the story is told purely in images.

    Although Eisenstein had been making films for twenty years before this, it's clear his style was still evolving. He editing technique prior to this was mostly used to enhance action sequences or make political points through comparisons. Now he uses it to convey emotions and relations between characters. If he had lived a little longer he could perhaps have broadened his horizons and become a director of dramas. Still, as with his previous works this is a story told more through the masses of people – not through the individuals.

    Perhaps the biggest change between Eisenstein's early silent works and these later sound films is in their level of stylisation. While the silent films may have been very visually dynamic, the way they were staged and acted was essentially realist – the crowds, the action, the set ups all looked authentic. Ivan the Terrible on the other hand is theatrical, almost operatic – stentorian voices, exaggerated gestures and outlandish looking characters. One thing along these lines that is consistent throughout all his pictures (and was sometimes at odds with the realism of his earlier work) is the way in which he cast and directed his actors so as to leave no doubts as to their character. While the lead roles were filled by strikingly good-looking actors, the villains were often painfully ugly, and are often made to look ridiculous in the way they act. Look at, for example, Ivan's rival for the throne Vladimir, whom Eisenstein turns into a half-wit with a vacant expression. He also likes to remind us of animals – for example the conniving, hunchbacked diplomat who resembles some kind of crow.

    Eisenstein also here takes on an expressionist look for the first time – very en vogue in Hollywood at the time, but virtually an unknown movement in Soviet cinema. Ivan the Terrible is set largely in dim, grimy interiors – in contrast to earlier Eisenstein pictures which took place largely outdoors – so the grainy, moody look is quite appropriate. He pays a great deal of attention to lighting, with characters often throwing large shadows against walls very much in the style of Fritz Lang and Michael Curtiz.

    Of the two completed parts of Ivan the Terrible (there was to be a third, but it was axed by the government during production), I personally prefer the second. They are more or less identical in style, but Part 1 is made up of a series of short episodes and is a little less engaging. The coronation and wedding scenes are perfectly constructed, and the war on Kazan is up there with the battle scenes in Aleksandr Nevsky. I find the later scenes with Ivan's brush with death and his self-imposed exile a little slow, even though they are still incredibly well made.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Took over 3 years to make.
    • Goofs
      After Anastasia's death, when discussing the Livonian war the "only" son of the Czar is mentioned. However at the time Ivan had two sons, Feodor, who became Czar Feodor I of Russia, and also Tsarevich Ivan Ivanovich.
    • Quotes

      Czar Ivan IV: Those who tore down the bells without Czar's permission, those by Czar's command get torn down the heads for not too long.

    • Crazy credits
      All the credits are showed in front of a fire smoke.
    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Ivan the Terrible, Part I?Powered by Alexa
    • Have critics praised this film unanimously?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 6, 1946 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Language
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Ivan the Terrible, Part I
    • Filming locations
      • Alma-Aty, Kazhachstan
    • Production companies
      • Mosfilm
      • Tsentralnuyu Obedinyonnuyu Kinostudiyu (TsOKS)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $12,196
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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