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Guerre et paix

Original title: Voyna i mir
  • 1965
  • Tous publics
  • 6h 33m
IMDb RATING
8.3/10
9.1K
YOUR RATING
Guerre et paix (1965)
EpicPeriod DramaWar EpicDramaRomanceWar

The Russian aristocracy prepares for the French invasion on the eve of 1812.The Russian aristocracy prepares for the French invasion on the eve of 1812.The Russian aristocracy prepares for the French invasion on the eve of 1812.

  • Director
    • Sergey Bondarchuk
  • Writers
    • Lev Tolstoy
    • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Vasiliy Solovyov
  • Stars
    • Lyudmila Saveleva
    • Vyacheslav Tikhonov
    • Sergey Bondarchuk
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.3/10
    9.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Writers
      • Lev Tolstoy
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
      • Vasiliy Solovyov
    • Stars
      • Lyudmila Saveleva
      • Vyacheslav Tikhonov
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • 86User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos298

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Lyudmila Saveleva
    Lyudmila Saveleva
    • Natasha Rostova
    Vyacheslav Tikhonov
    Vyacheslav Tikhonov
    • Prince Andrei Bolkonsky
    Sergey Bondarchuk
    Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Pierre Bezukhov
    Boris Zakhava
    Boris Zakhava
    • Field Marshal Kutuzov
    • (as B. Zakhava)
    Anatoli Ktorov
    Anatoli Ktorov
    • Prince Nikolai Andreevich Bolkonsky
    • (as A. Ktorov)
    Anastasiya Vertinskaya
    Anastasiya Vertinskaya
    • Princess Lise Bolkonskaya
    • (as A. Vertinskaya)
    Antonina Shuranova
    Antonina Shuranova
    • Princess Maria Bolkonskaya
    • (as A. Shuranova)
    Oleg Tabakov
    Oleg Tabakov
    • Nikolai Rostov
    Viktor Stanitsyn
    Viktor Stanitsyn
    • Ilya Andreyevich Rostov
    Irina Skobtseva
    Irina Skobtseva
    • Hélène Bezukhova
    • (as I. Skobtseva)
    Boris Smirnov
    Boris Smirnov
    • Prince Vasili Kuragin
    • (as B. Smirnov)
    Vasiliy Lanovoy
    Vasiliy Lanovoy
    • Anatol Kuragin
    • (as V. Lanovoy)
    Kira Golovko
    Kira Golovko
    • Countess Rostova
    Irina Gubanova
    Irina Gubanova
    • Sonia Rostova
    • (as I. Gubanova)
    Aleksandr Borisov
    Aleksandr Borisov
    • Uncle Rostov
    Oleg Efremov
    Oleg Efremov
    • Dolokhov
    • (as O. Efremov)
    Giuli Chokhonelidze
    Giuli Chokhonelidze
    • Prince Bagration
    • (as G. Chokhonelidze)
    Vladislav Strzhelchik
    Vladislav Strzhelchik
    • Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte
    • (as V. Strzhelchik)
    • Director
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
    • Writers
      • Lev Tolstoy
      • Sergey Bondarchuk
      • Vasiliy Solovyov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews86

    8.39K
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    Featured reviews

    robot123

    An incredible film

    I have never read Tolstoy's novel, but I have seen several screen adaptations of it. This version far outshined the others, and it stands alone as one of the greatest films I have ever seen. It is filmed with a rich sort of beauty; it is very visually pleasing. Colors are bold and contrast is sometimes sharp. The camera lens sweeps forward, spins on its side, and waltzes along with the path of the characters. It is a very human portrayal. The camera is not a static periscope, but more like spying through the vision of a real person. Although it is quite a long movie, it never fails to keep my attention.
    Sascha Tesch

    The most faithful movie adaptation of a book I've seen

    When you see the movie that adapts your favorite work of literature you have high expectations. You have a picture of the scenes, locations and characters in your mind, and hardly ever a movie comes close to those images. Likewise, I found the 1954 movie War and Peace very disappointing. I was prepared for a similar experience before I saw the two-part movie by Russian director Sergei Bondarchuk. And was surprised. Still, the seven hours' version still omits many facets (including the almost satirical epilogue) of the original 1600 pages work of Leo Tolstoy. But never before lived a movie up to the images of my mind like this one. The actors, the locations, must have been picked very carefully, because they are very close to how they are depicted in the book. In more than one instance I had the feeling that my imagination had been brought to the screen. But it isn't the faithful rendition of the material alone that makes this movie so unique and wonderful. The broad scope of emotions, the grand scale of the aristocracy's parties with all their luxury, the battles with tens of thousands of extras, the impressive burning of Moscow, the actors who don't act but live the plot, it all adds to the wonderful experience of this film. This movie is highly recommended to any true lover of Tolstoy's book, who is interested in Napoleonic history or simply anyone who likes deep, moving, impressive movies. For anyone interested in Napoleonic history, I also highly recommend Bondarchuk's Waterloo, from 1969/70.
    TheVid

    A project so gigantic that it had to be funded by the Soviet Government.

    Bondarchuk brings Tolstoy's enormous literary work to the screen with all the scope and pomposity that the Soviet film industry could muster in the sixties. It's a long, two-part movie that tries to give moviegoers as much of an experience as readers often get from the novel. It's generally successful in a clinical way. The production design and set pieces are delivered on a massive scale, with battle scenes that are basically re-enactments of history. There's enough creative casting to make most of the characters come alive, although much of the drama is wooden and stagey (just as in the book, I might add). All in all, this is probably the biggest visual spectacle ever put on film, even in the age of CGI (a fact which only makes the viewer more appreciative of the logistics involved in setting up a production as big as this). A colossal epic that gives true meaning to the term "years in the making with a cast of thousands!". Image/Rusico is presenting a definitive DVD version in the Sovscope widescreen ratio with the original 70mm six-track magoptical sound on four discs. That's around 7 hours of subtitles for those inclined to see this spectacle in it's purest form.
    10OttoVonB

    Collossus

    War and Peace, to many, is synonymous with a colossus of a book. The ultimate door-stopper. It is among the most complex and epic works of literature ever written. In 19th century Moscow and St-Petersburg, youths grow, make their mistakes… hearts are bound and then broken… and then the great war against Napoleon tears all these lives apart. Leo Tolstoy created intimate portrayals, compelling characters and epic action, telling the story of an entire country and an entire era effortlessly and elegantly. So if books are often difficult to adapt, this one should be completely impossible (witness the shallow King Vidor adaptation).

    This film is the stuff of legends. Reportedly one of the most expensive productions ever created, Sergei Bondarchuk's "War and Peace" benefited from the Red Army's involvement and the Soviet Government's financing, and clocks in at about 7 hours. It is as faithful to its source as could be imaginable. In fact, it almost transcends its source.

    Admirably cast (the angelic Liudmila Savelieva is ideal as Natasha Rostova and the director was unbelievably wise in casting himself as Pierre Besukhov), elegantly transcribed into a witty screenplay and enacted with class and conviction by its immense cast, "War and Peace" is not just a good adaptation. Its merits as a film are colossal. The cinematography defies any other film, particularly during the battle scenes: rejecting the painterly staticism of Barry Lyndon and the simple charging and distant shots of older films, the violence in Sergei Bondarchuk's epic mirrors that of Kingdom of Heaven (2005!!!), as the camera flies over a never-ending battlefield at full speed, glides aver frantic canons and divisions, crashes into mêlées and follows haunting stampedes of riderless horsemen (a potent metaphor for how the great leaders of the time lost all control over the conflict's proportions). All this without a pixel of CGI in sight (and all the better for it as it presents shots that the eye would simply refuse to believe if generated by a computer) The epic battle of before the sack of Moscow is so colossal and devastating, that even Napoleon looks confused at how to feel before the ocean of corpses sprawled before him. This is the greatest display of cinematic warfare ever committed to the screen. That the calmer scenes manage to sustain that level of excellence is a testament to how grandiose an effort this film is. The display of repressed emotions and overt tenderness are heart-breaking and many episodic scenes stand out magnificently, such as the wolf hunt, the opening balls (easily rivaling anything in "Il Gattopardo") and the duel. This is a film to which the fantastic "Dr Zhivago" feels like a small appetizer… Bondarchuk's "War and Peace" reaches beyond the book and in doing so successfully is one of the greatest motion pictures of all time. It is cinematic poetry and entertainment of the highest order. And to sum things up in an overused – but never more appropriate than here – they'll never make'em like this again.
    artnamy

    the very best!

    The best film ever made, ESPECIALLY when taking into account all the logistics - the Soviet Government as a film studio?? (sort of makes sense, after you picture Leonid Brezhnev as Louis B. Mayer), and the world's most infamous LONG novel turned into a megamotion picture.

    It probably hasn't been seen in the US on a broad scale since ABC had the good sense to run it as a four part late-night special in early 1973 (anyone else remember)?

    Not even subtitles - for those of us who are not true foreign film buffs, I mean - can hurt this film. Bondarchuk's amazing direction, as well as his acting, is breathtaking. The Russian people have been celebrated as lovers of great writing and the subject at hand, "War and Peace", becomes a poem at the conclusion.

    Truly magnificent from every level - as a period piece, a psychological drama, a war movie, a love story, a history...Tolstoy would be universally acclaimed ahead of Shakespeare if he (Tolstoy) had the good sense to be from England...

    Don't miss it. How the Soviet Government, at the height of the Cold War, could finance and produce a masterpiece like this is one of the great mysteries of the 20th century. Give Bondarchuk the credit.

    More like this

    Guerre et paix I: le prince André
    8.1
    Guerre et paix I: le prince André
    Guerre et paix IV: l'année terrible
    8.1
    Guerre et paix IV: l'année terrible
    Guerre et paix III: Borodino
    8.3
    Guerre et paix III: Borodino
    Guerre et paix II: Natacha
    7.9
    Guerre et paix II: Natacha
    Guerre et Paix
    6.7
    Guerre et Paix
    War & Peace
    8.2
    War & Peace
    Guerre et Paix
    8.1
    Guerre et Paix
    Quand passent les cigognes
    8.3
    Quand passent les cigognes
    Waterloo
    7.3
    Waterloo
    Guerre et paix
    7.2
    Guerre et paix
    Napoléon
    8.2
    Napoléon
    Le Destin d'un homme
    7.9
    Le Destin d'un homme

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sergey Bondarchuk created meticulous recreations of battles of the Napoleonic Wars. The Battle of Borodino against the Napoleon's invasion is the largest battle scene ever filmed.
    • Goofs
      When some of the characters are attending the opera, "L'incoronazione di Poppea" by Claudio Monteverdi is being performed. It premiered in Venice in 1642, but by the time that the story takes place (ca. 1807), it had been lost and all but forgotten. A score wasn't rediscovered until 1888, and the first modern performance was given in 1905. The anachronism is probably intentional since Monteverdi's tale of the destructiveness of erotic desire foreshadows the events immediately after that scene.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: On 12th June, 1812, the forces of western Europe crossed the frontiers of Russia and war began. In other words, an event took place that was contrary to all human reason and human nature.

    • Alternate versions
      There are three different versions: The American release, a 360 minute film in two parts (dubbed in English). The Russian release, a series of four films totaling 403 minutes (see also Vojna i mir I: Andrei Bolkonsky (1965), Vojna i mir II: Natasha Rostova (1966), Vojna i mir III: 1812 god (1967) and Vojna i mir IV: Pierre Bezukhov (1967)). Most reviews (including Leonard Maltin's) list this film's running time as 507 minutes; this is a mistake due to the longer lengths of 70mm prints.
    • Connections
      Edited from Guerre et paix I: le prince André (1965)
    • Soundtracks
      Prologue
      (uncredited)

      from "L'Incoronazione di Poppea"

      Composed by Claudio Monteverdi

      Written by Giovanni Francesco Busenello

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 16, 1966 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Soviet Union
    • Official sites
      • arabuloku.com
      • Mosfilm [rus]
    • Languages
      • Russian
      • German
      • French
    • Also known as
      • La guerra y la paz
    • Filming locations
      • Borodino, Moskovskaya oblast, Russia(scenes before the main battle with Napoleon)
    • Production company
      • Mosfilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • RUR 8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $148,503
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $22,976
      • Feb 17, 2019
    • Gross worldwide
      • $149,485
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      6 hours 33 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.20 : 1

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