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Tikhiy Don (1930) Online

Tikhiy Don (1930) Online
Original Title :
Tikhiy Don
Genre :
Movie / Drama
Year :
1930
Directror :
Ivan Pravov,Olga Preobrazhenskaya
Cast :
Nikolay Podgorny,Andrei Abrikosov,Emma Tsesarskaya
Writer :
Ivan Pravov,Olga Preobrazhenskaya
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 15min
Rating :
7.3/10
Tikhiy Don (1930) Online

Credited cast:
Nikolay Podgorny Nikolay Podgorny - Pantelej Prokofievich Melekhov (as N. Podgorny)
Andrei Abrikosov Andrei Abrikosov - Grigori Pantelejevich Melekhov (as A. Abrikosov)
Emma Tsesarskaya Emma Tsesarskaya - Aksinya Astagova (as E. Tsesarskaya)
Raisa Puzhnaya Raisa Puzhnaya - Natalya Koshonova (as R. Puzhnaya)
Aleksandr Gromov Aleksandr Gromov - Petr Melekhov (as A. Gromov)
Georgi Kovrov Georgi Kovrov - Stepan Astakhov (as G. Kovrov)
Yelena Maksimova Yelena Maksimova - Daria Melekhova (as Ye. Maksimova)
S. Churakovskaya S. Churakovskaya - Aksinja
Vasili Kovrigin Vasili Kovrigin - Prokofij Melekhov (as V. Kovrigin)
Ivan Bykov Ivan Bykov - Garandza
Leonid Yurenev Leonid Yurenev - Gendarm (as L. Yurenyov)
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Serguei. Churakovsky Serguei. Churakovsky - Yevgeni Listnitsky
Sofya Levitina Sofya Levitina - Natalya's mother
Antonin Pankryshev Antonin Pankryshev - Imperial family member
F. Safonova F. Safonova - Ilnichna


User reviews

Zainn

Zainn

An earnest presentation of Sholokhov's novel in a silent film adaptation. Poor Aksinya, married to a brute of a husband, Stepan, seeks refuge in the arms of her lover, Gregory. Troubles arise when Stepan is apprised of her infidelity, but even more disconcerting is Gregory's initial unwillingness to run away with her ('What, and lose my land?') Further complications ensue when Gregory is forced to marry Natalya who loves him despite her knowledge of his love for Aksinya. World War I intervenes, and Gregory is dispatched to the front where he gets a political education in the lack of justice in which landless peasants fight and die to protect the farms of the rich landowners. Scenes depicting Cossack troops putting down the revolutionaries in the 1905 uprising are included, as is a bittersweet finale in which tables are turned on the young lovers. If you don't mind piercingly dark glares and exaggerated eyebrow motions - all part and parcel of silent film emoting - this is, all-in-all, a good film.