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IMDbPro

La commissaire

Original title: Komissar
  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
La commissaire (1967)
DramaWar

Klavdia Vavilova, a Red Army cavalry commissar, is waylaid by an unexpected pregnancy. She stays with a Jewish family to give birth and is softened somewhat by the experience of family life.Klavdia Vavilova, a Red Army cavalry commissar, is waylaid by an unexpected pregnancy. She stays with a Jewish family to give birth and is softened somewhat by the experience of family life.Klavdia Vavilova, a Red Army cavalry commissar, is waylaid by an unexpected pregnancy. She stays with a Jewish family to give birth and is softened somewhat by the experience of family life.

  • Director
    • Aleksandr Askoldov
  • Writers
    • Aleksandr Askoldov
    • Vasiliy Grossman
  • Stars
    • Nonna Mordyukova
    • Rolan Bykov
    • Raisa Nedashkovskaya
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aleksandr Askoldov
    • Writers
      • Aleksandr Askoldov
      • Vasiliy Grossman
    • Stars
      • Nonna Mordyukova
      • Rolan Bykov
      • Raisa Nedashkovskaya
    • 20User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 4 nominations total

    Photos65

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    Top cast19

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    Nonna Mordyukova
    Nonna Mordyukova
    • Klavdia Vavilova
    Rolan Bykov
    Rolan Bykov
    • Yefim Mahazannik
    Raisa Nedashkovskaya
    Raisa Nedashkovskaya
    • Maria Mahazannik
    Lyudmila Volynskaya
    Lyudmila Volynskaya
    • The Grandmother
    Vasiliy Shukshin
    Vasiliy Shukshin
    • The Commandant
    Lyubov Kats
    • Children
    • (as Lyuba Kats)
    Pavel Levin
    • Children
    • (as Pavlik Levin)
    Dmitri Kleyman
    • Children
    • (as Dima Kleyman)
    Marta Bratkova
    • Children
    Igor Fishman
    • Children
    Sergey Nikonenko
    Sergey Nikonenko
    Otar Koberidze
    Otar Koberidze
    Leonid Reutov
    Leonid Reutov
    • Chief of Staff
    • (as L. Reutov)
    Valeri Ryzhakov
    Valeri Ryzhakov
    • Kursant
    Viktor Shakhov
    Viktor Shakhov
      Vladimir Vasilyev
      • Appearing
      Viktor Ilichyov
      Viktor Ilichyov
      • Appearing
      • (uncredited)
      Semen Morosov
      • Appearing
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Aleksandr Askoldov
      • Writers
        • Aleksandr Askoldov
        • Vasiliy Grossman
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews20

      7.51.7K
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      Featured reviews

      10MikeH111

      Don't be tricked

      Don't be tricked by the rating. This movie is wildly, unforgivably underrated on IMDb. To speak of its beauties would take me volumes. Suffice it to say: find it, if you can (it may be still available in good video stores, on VHS) and be enthralled by one-of-a-kind movie. As opposed to overrated 8+ 9+ c... like American Beauty or the Korean Oldboy and other movies full of either vapid pomposity or of guts and gore and blood and nonsense, Komissar is an extraordinarily beautiful and fluent meditation on human nature, war, religion, childhood, good and evil. Miss it at your own peril.

      10 out of 10
      jlawrenc

      this film shows the beauty and courage of a family caught in the midst of war.

      Throughout the movie, `Commissar', the innocence and naivety of the children allows them to be used as a medium through which many emotions can be conveyed. Sheltered from reality by their youth, the actions of children reflect their environment, unhindered as they are by experience, opinions, or understanding. The actions of a child are not filtered by taboos; the actions are pure and unadulterated regurgitations of the world around them.

      The example that stands out the most in the film is that of the playful pogrom. The actions of the three children, taken against the fourth, are a horrible reflection of the world they live in. However, this is not the only such example. In fact, the same concept, used in the very next scene, shows a beautiful reflection of the strength and courage of a family caught in the maelstrom. As the bombs begin to fall, and the children all begin to wail within the cellar, it falls on Efim to hold everything together. He does this in an incredibly powerful scene, standing up in the middle of his family and beginning to dance. Instinctively the children stand up to join their father in an act they are obviously as familiar with as the pogrom, and are placated by mimicking the ritualistic, soothing moves of their father. Whether or not they understand the significance of the dance, just as they may or may not fully understand the pogrom, is irrelevant to them. All that is important is that it and their father are there to give them comfort.

      Through the same general device, two very different ends are achieved. Many responses stressed the horrifically moving quality of the pogrom scene, but fail to mention the beauty and hope of a father dancing with his children, while the world rips itself apart around them.
      8runamokprods

      Long suppressed Soviet film.

      The story and characters are a bit thin; a female leader in the Russian Revolutionary army in 1922 is disgraced when she is found to be pregnant, and goes to live with a Jewish family, loses her hard shell and becomes a mother.

      But the black and white images are truly striking and impressive, especially the fantasy sequences. They give the story a much deeper power and resonance than it would otherwise have.

      Especially impressive as a first film. this was suppressed by the Moscow authorities for 20 years for it's sympathetic view of Jews and their oppression in Russia, and the implication that the USSR was complicit in knowing about and not stopping the concentration camps of WW 2.
      9hoobits

      This is cinema

      A film on the same echelon as Kilmov's Come And See, Jancsó's The Red and The White, Shepitko's Ascent and the great Russian silents as well as the vanguard 60s cinema. This is one of those films where image and sound form a perfect marriage committing to screen an onslaught of ingenious, uproarious and emotional imagery marred with wonderful sound design and score, all strung together by ingenious editing. This is cinema.

      The story is one of a Red Army woman officer during the Russian civil war, who ends up pregnant and is forced to live with a Ukrainian Jewish family, who has been used and abused countless times by the red and the whites. This is a story of humans coming together and setting aside their differences and understanding each other amongst suffering and strife. It is a test of loyalty to one's self, one's family, one's country.

      Commissar was banned on its initial completion and writer/director Aleksandr Askoldov was kicked out of the Communist party and not allowed to work in the film business in any form again. It wasn't until 1988 that the ban was lifted and the soundtrack remastered/re-done along with a reconstruction of the picture, which was fairly intact. But not until now has it been wildly available so I really would urge anyone who enjoys Kurosawa, Tarkovsky, Tarr or any of the before mentioned films to seek this one out. The US DVD from Kino is probably their best transfer yet; very pristine and sharp with no a lot of dirt or scratches, although it is from a PAL source so there are some ghosting effects on large movements, making the picture look simultaneously in slow mo and normal frame rate
      gaperkins

      Religious symbols in Komissar

      One of the reasons that Commissar was initially banned in the Soviet Union was the use of religious imagery in the film. One example of this is shortly after Vavilova, the Commissar, has her baby. She walks by a graveyard, and the Russian Orthodox crosses are prominently featured in the shot. This can be interpreted to mean that Vavilova was forced to carry the baby, which she initially considers a burden, in the same manner that Christ had to carry His cross. It could also symbolize the idea of a life cycle, where Vavilova just had a child and is then seen at the cemetery, where she is surrounded by death. Another instance where crosses appear in the film was when Vavilova, Yefim (the father of the Jewish family she is forced to stay with), and his family were boarding up the windows and doors to prepare for the White Army soldiers that were coming. In one shot, Yefim is nailing a beam across a window, perpendicular to another board which clearly makes the shape of a cross.

      The other major example of religion that can be found in the film is when Vavilova travels to the priest, and then to where the synagogue had been. She does this in order to have her baby baptized, or recognized in the Jewish religion. This would not have sat well with Soviet censors, seeing a strong female Commissar traveling in search of someone to baptize her child. I found this scene particularly moving because it seemed that Vavilova simply asked the priest for directions, and would rather have had her baby brought up to be Jewish. This shows the positive impact that Yefim and his family had on Vavilova during her stay.

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      Related interests

      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
      Frères d'armes (2001)
      War

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        After making the film, Aleksandr Askoldov lost his job, was expelled from the Communist Party, charged with social parasitism, exiled from Moscow, and banned from working on feature films for life. He was told that the single copy of the film had been destroyed. Mordyukova and Bykov, major Soviet movie stars, had to plead with the authorities to spare him of even bigger charges. The film was shelved by the KGB for twenty years.
      • Connections
        Featured in I Am an Ox, I Am a Horse, I Am a Man, I Am a Woman (1988)

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      FAQ15

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • September 21, 1988 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • Soviet Union
      • Language
        • Russian
      • Also known as
        • The Commissar
      • Production companies
        • Kinostudiya imeni M. Gorkogo
        • Mosfilm
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross US & Canada
        • $388,029
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 50m(110 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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