Outskirts (1933 film)
Outskirts | |
---|---|
Original 1933 Russian poster for Outskirts, by Russian poster pioneer Izrail Bograd | |
Directed by | Boris Barnet |
Written by |
Boris Barnet Konstantin Finn |
Starring |
Aleksandr Chistyakov Sergei Komarov Yelena Kuzmina Nikolay Bogolyubov Nikolai Kryuchkov Hans Klering Mikhail Zharov Vladimir Uralsky |
Music by | Sergei Vasilenko |
Cinematography |
Mikhail Kirillov A. Spiridonov |
Production company | |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian/ German |
Outskirts (Russian: Окраина, meaning Outskirts), also known in English as The Patriots or by the transliterated Russian title Okraina, is a 1933 Soviet film directed by Boris Barnet.[1]
Plot summary
1914. In a small town in a remote part of the Russian Empire, shoemakers struggle to organise against factory owners. When war comes, they are united as soldiers of the Tsar on the Eastern Front. Anka, a local girl, forges a relationship with a German POW. The film criticises war profiteers and encourages workers to reach across national lines. In 1917 the Russian Revolution comes.
See also
- The Outskirts, a 1998 film loosely based on the 1933 film
Cast
- Sergey Komarov — Alexander P. Greshin
- Elena Kuzmina — Anka Greshina
- Robert Erdmann — Robert Karlovich, tenant
- Alexander Chistyakov — Pyotr Kadkin
- Nikolay Bogolyubov — Nikolai Kadkin
- Nikolai Kryuchkov — Senka Kadkin
- Mikhail Zharov — Kraevich
- Hans Klering — Mueller, a German prisoner of war
- Alexander Zhukov — policeman
- Vladimir Ural — Cabby
- Andrew Veit — a German prisoner
- Mikhail Yanshin — soldier
References
External links
- The Patriots at the Internet Movie Database
- Outskirts at AllMovie
- Review of Outskirts by Becky Bradway
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.