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Taras Bulba

  • 1962
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Tony Curtis, Yul Brynner, and Christine Kaufmann in Taras Bulba (1962)
In the 16th-century Ukraine, the Polish overlords and Ukrainian cossacks fight for control of the land but frequent Turkish invasions force them to unite against the common Turkish foe.
Play trailer3:36
1 Video
64 Photos
AdventureDramaHistoryRomanceWar

In the 16th-century Ukraine, the Polish overlords and Ukrainian cossacks fight for control of the land but frequent Turkish invasions force them to unite against the common Turkish foe.In the 16th-century Ukraine, the Polish overlords and Ukrainian cossacks fight for control of the land but frequent Turkish invasions force them to unite against the common Turkish foe.In the 16th-century Ukraine, the Polish overlords and Ukrainian cossacks fight for control of the land but frequent Turkish invasions force them to unite against the common Turkish foe.

  • Director
    • J. Lee Thompson
  • Writers
    • Waldo Salt
    • Karl Tunberg
    • Nikolay Gogol
  • Stars
    • Tony Curtis
    • Yul Brynner
    • Christine Kaufmann
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • J. Lee Thompson
    • Writers
      • Waldo Salt
      • Karl Tunberg
      • Nikolay Gogol
    • Stars
      • Tony Curtis
      • Yul Brynner
      • Christine Kaufmann
    • 63User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 nominations total

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    Trailer 3:36
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    Photos64

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    Top cast47

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    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • Andrei Bulba
    Yul Brynner
    Yul Brynner
    • Taras Bulba
    Christine Kaufmann
    Christine Kaufmann
    • Natalia Dubrov
    Sam Wanamaker
    Sam Wanamaker
    • Filipenko
    Brad Dexter
    Brad Dexter
    • Shilo
    Guy Rolfe
    Guy Rolfe
    • Prince Grigory
    Perry Lopez
    Perry Lopez
    • Ostap Bulba
    George Macready
    George Macready
    • Governor
    Ilka Windish
    • Sofia Bulba
    Vladimir Sokoloff
    Vladimir Sokoloff
    • Old Stepan
    Vladimir Irman
    • Grisha Kubenko
    Daniel Ocko
    • Ivan Mykola
    Abraham Sofaer
    Abraham Sofaer
    • Abbot
    Mickey Finn
    Mickey Finn
    • Korzh
    Richard Rust
    Richard Rust
    • Capt. Alex
    Ron Weyand
    • Tymoshevsky
    Vitina Marcus
    Vitina Marcus
    • Gypsy Princess
    Leon Alton
    Leon Alton
    • Servant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • J. Lee Thompson
    • Writers
      • Waldo Salt
      • Karl Tunberg
      • Nikolay Gogol
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.34.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8necrodemion

    Amazing such a subject made by Hollywood!

    That this classic novel by Gogol about the legendary Ukrainian cossack hero could have been made into a big-budget Hollywood blockbuster, and that this was done at the very height of the cold war seems unbelievable today.

    While the film is dated a bit by the kitschy love story involving Tony Curtis' character, Yul Brynner is perfect in his role which seems one of those he was born to play.

    A colourful and spectacular historical epic in the best of the then-dying old Hollywood tradition, this is probably the only exposure that the American public at large has to Ukrainian history, and in this alone it is a valuable work. But the film manages to succeed on the entertainment level as well, and I recommend it to all fans of the good ol' Hollywood studio historical drama.
    8bkoganbing

    "Ride Like A Cossack, Fight Like A Cossack"

    Although the famous Nikolai Gogol novel, Taras Bulba, was filmed many times, this version starring Tony Curtis and Yul Brynner is the best known at least in the USA. It's an exciting portrait of 16th century Ukraine under the then powerful kingdom of Poland.

    What's strangely muted in this version though is the religious angle. The Poles are Roman Catholic and the Ukranians are Russian Orthodox, it's a very big part of the reason for the resentments shown here yet we never see the religious beliefs portrayed for either group. Not sure why the script didn't include it.

    As rulers the Poles hire out the Cossack Ukranians who in today's terminology might be considered a paramilitary outfit to fight off the Ottoman Turks and then turn on them. Yul Brynner as one of the Cossack brigade commanders lops off the right hand of Guy Rolfe, the Polish prince in retribution, but that hardly satisfies. He goes back to the steppes of the Ukraine and awaits a time for some real payback.

    In the meantime he fathers two sons, Tony Curtis and Perry Lopez, who both inherit their father's geopolitical views. Brynner sends them off to school in Poland to learn all the Poles know.

    While there Curtis falls in love with a Polish princess Christine Kauffman. It's the beginning of his downfall as a Cossack.

    In his memoirs Tony Curtis says that Yul Brynner was a strangely aloof character with a sort of self imposed grandeur about him in his manner. But that Taras Bulba was a part he was born to play. I certainly can't visualize anyone else in the role, including Burt Lancaster who originally had the screen rights then gave them to Tony Curtis when he couldn't do the film. Of course Brynner being in the title role might have had some resentments to being second billed to Curtis, but Curtis in fact as a co-producer and he who produces decides billing.

    Curtis also mentions that on the Argentine pampas location away from American laws, the long banned 'flying W' was used in the filming of the battle and charge scenes and many horses were killed. He also mentions that with production overrun costs and accountants ripping him and the film company off what started as a three million dollar film became a nine million dollar film and Taras Bulba in theatrical release barely cleared ten million.

    However Tony did get a second wife out of the film. Christine Kauffman became the second Mrs. Tony Curtis after the film. Curtis says that Christine did not break him and Janet Leigh up, that things were over before he met here, still that was the common gossip back in the day.

    Director J. Lee Thompson made great use of the Argentine pampas standing in for the Ukraine steppes and one does get a feel for the Cossack love of the land the freedom of the wide open spaces. Cossack stories in the Ukraine are just like our American westerns. Those people for all their faults settled and conquered much of what is now Russian Federation.

    As a bonus Franz Waxman's musical score which did earn Taras Bulba it's only Academy Award nomination is really quite rousing. We get to hear Yul Brynner sing in this film which is a treat, a Cossack drinking song. And the love theme for Curtis and Kauffman, The Wishing Star, is a very beautiful song that Tony Martin put on an album of film songs he did at the time.

    Ukranian Americans loved this particular film for which I can personally attest. I think others will as well.
    6ragosaal

    Entertaining (but not in the "pampas")

    I've seen the reviews here and a couple of comments set "Taras Bulba"'s location in the Argentine pampas. As a native Argentine I must say that's not correct; the pampas run all through the middle part of our Country but this film was shot in the Province of Salta way up in the northern part of Argentina (some 1400 miles from Buenos Aires); the pampas are a huge flat ground very fertile, but Salta is uneven with not too high hills ("cerros") very different from the pampas. Another reviewer says Tony Curtis declared once that when he and co-star Kristine Kaufmann got mixed up during the filming he was already divorced of Janet Leigh; I don't know about that but I can assure you that Leigh came to Salta with him (a friend of mine has a photo with her on the "cerros").

    As to the picture, I really enjoyed it -also because I lived in Salta a couple of years and the landscape is very familiar to me- but I think a real classical epic could have come out of Nicolai Gogol's famous novel with a more elaborated script (as a reviewer correctly stated here).

    J. Lee Thompson's product seems sort of "cheap" and lacks spectacle (except for some real good battle scenes) although I admit if has some very good moments. A somehow impressive one is when the big doors of the sieged city open slowly and André (Curtis) appears in a frontal close shot wearing a Polish armor and helmet for he will make a run for food too feed the starving citizens inside in a clear treason to his country and father for the love of a woman. Also the final dark atmosphere Thompson achieves when Taras (Yul Brynner) confronts his favourite son after a treason he can't possibly understand and even less when André just explains "I did what I had to do".

    Brynner's performance though a little overacted is good enough and he fills the role of Taras easily. Tony Curtis makes a great effort and gets some good moments as André though he clearly lacks the appropriate "physic du rol". The rest of the cast gives a good support, among them Sam Wanamaker, Brad Dexter, Guy Rolfe and George MacReady. German actress Kristine Kauffman shows her beauty.

    All in all "Taras Bulba" comes out as an entertaining and amusing film in its genre and a decent intent on Gogol's book, but no much more than that.
    dbdumonteil

    Cossacks vs Poles

    Borrowing from Gogol the title ,the proper nouns and the son's killing,Jack Lee Thompson's movie is quite entertaining,ideal for a rainy day or after a hard day's work.

    The first part is the most interesting: the scenes at the university with its sadistic monks -while one of them is flogging the rebel students,the other kneels down and pray- and its "racism" : a lot of Pole Students cannot accept the fact that those primitive savage cossacks study in their school.Curtis was almost emasculated "to prevent him from sullying Pole girls." It sometimes recalls"Romeo and Juliette",which Christine Kaufman's resemblance with Olivia Hussey who would play the part of Juliette six years later reinforces.Yul Brynner is ideally cast as Taras.

    The 1936 French version ("Tarass Boulba" French spelling)mainly deals with the second part -the siege- and the stories are similar with the same love interest.
    7mikemoldovan

    Music

    I agree with most of the posts. However, one area that does not get attention is the soundtrack to the movie. When the Cossacks gather and ride to the Polish city to fight, the music is truly great. Having seen the movie over 40 years ago I can still hear the music of the ride to Dubnoi over and over in my head. I find it intoxicating!! Yul Brenner is made for the part of Tarus. I could never see Tony Curtis as a Ukrainian prince and his looks do not fit the part. He is however a Hungarian of Eastern European descent. This is a fun movie that has a great score, cinematography, and some interesting scenes and performances. The Yul Brenner song is laughable though.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to director J. Lee Thompson, in an interview in Yul Brynner: The Man Who Was King (1995), there was a misunderstanding with the hundreds of Argentine gauchos playing horsemen . They were told that horsemen who fell off their horse during an attack scene would be paid extra--but only those who were directed to do so. When the scene was shot, two-thirds of them fell off their horses and expected the extra pay. Upon being told they were not going to be paid extra, they threatened to strike. Yul Brynner then took steak dinners out to their encampment that evening and spent hours entertaining them. Impressed by this, the gauchos returned to work the next day.
    • Goofs
      The Cossack's "scalp-lock" is not on the back but the front! Only the old Cossack is the one that has it correctly.
    • Quotes

      Taras: There's only ONE WAY to keep faith with a Pole. Put your faith in your sword and the sword in the Pole.

    • Crazy credits
      Thanks to the army of the Argentine Republic.
    • Connections
      Edited into Au coeur du temps: Attack of the Barbarians (1967)
    • Soundtracks
      The Wishing Star
      Music by Franz Waxman

      Lyrics by Mack David

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 21, 1962 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • MGM
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Тарас Бульба
    • Filming locations
      • Salta, Argentina
    • Production companies
      • Harold Hecht Productions
      • Curtleigh Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $7,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $22,533
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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