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Le Don paisible

Titre original : Tikhiy Don
  • 1957
  • Not Rated
  • 5h 30min
NOTE IMDb
7,7/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
Elina Bystritskaya and Pyotr Glebov in Le Don paisible (1957)
DramaHistoryRomanceWar

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn epic story of shattered lives of the Don Cossacks through chaos of World War I, the Russian Revolution, and the following Civil War.An epic story of shattered lives of the Don Cossacks through chaos of World War I, the Russian Revolution, and the following Civil War.An epic story of shattered lives of the Don Cossacks through chaos of World War I, the Russian Revolution, and the following Civil War.

  • Réalisation
    • Sergey Gerasimov
  • Scénario
    • Sergey Gerasimov
    • Mikhail Sholokhov
  • Casting principal
    • Daniil Ilchenko
    • Anastasia Filippova
    • Pyotr Glebov
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,7/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Sergey Gerasimov
    • Scénario
      • Sergey Gerasimov
      • Mikhail Sholokhov
    • Casting principal
      • Daniil Ilchenko
      • Anastasia Filippova
      • Pyotr Glebov
    • 12avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos56

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    Rôles principaux42

    Modifier
    Daniil Ilchenko
    Daniil Ilchenko
    • Panteleimon Prokofyevich Melekhov
    • (as D. Ilchenko)
    Anastasia Filippova
    • Ilyinichna - maty
    • (as A. Filippova)
    Pyotr Glebov
    Pyotr Glebov
    • Grigoriy Melekhov
    • (as P. Glebov)
    Nikolai Smirnov
    Nikolai Smirnov
    • Pyotr Melekhov
    • (as N. Smirnov)
    Lyudmila Khityaeva
    Lyudmila Khityaeva
    • Dariya - zhena Melekhova
    • (as L. Khityayeva)
    Natalya Arkhangelskaya
    Natalya Arkhangelskaya
    • Dunyashka Melekhova
    • (as N. Arkhangelskaya)
    Aleksandr Blagovestov
    • Stepan Lekatov
    • (as A. Blagovestov)
    Elina Bystritskaya
    Elina Bystritskaya
    • Aksiniya
    • (as E. Bystritskaya)
    Aleksandr Zhukov
    Aleksandr Zhukov
    • Miron Koshevoy
    • (as A. Zhukov)
    Aleksandra Denisova
    Aleksandra Denisova
    • Lukinichna
    • (as A. Denisova)
    Zinaida Kirienko
    Zinaida Kirienko
    • Natalya Melekhova
    • (as Z. Kiriyenko)
    Boris Novikov
    Boris Novikov
    • Mitka Korshunov
    • (as B. Novikov)
    Aleksandr Karpov
    • ded Grishaka
    • (as A. Karpov)
    Yelena Maksimova
    Yelena Maksimova
    • maty Koshevogo
    • (as Ye. Maksimova)
    Gennadi Karyakin
    Gennadi Karyakin
    • Mikhail Koshevoy
    • (as G. Karyakin)
    Valentina Khmara
    Valentina Khmara
    • Mashutka Koshevaya
    • (as V. Khmara)
    Aleksandr Shatov
    Aleksandr Shatov
    • general Listnitskiy
    Pyotr Chernov
    Pyotr Chernov
    • Ilya Bunchuk
    • (as P. Chernov)
    • Réalisation
      • Sergey Gerasimov
    • Scénario
      • Sergey Gerasimov
      • Mikhail Sholokhov
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs12

    7,71.3K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    7lotus07

    Russian Pragmatism

    SYNOPSIS The lives and loves of Russian Cossacks living on the eastern steps of Russia during the Russian Revolution.

    CONCEPT IN RELATION TO THE VIEWER How events beyond our control and the judgment of others shape our lives in the long term. No matter how hard we try, sometimes fate controls our destiny.

    PROS AND CONS This is a great film, not because of it's acting or screenplay, but because it shows the western world that there were important events in the past that we have little knowledge of. It opens a doorway to us that we never knew existed and lets us glimpse some of the reasons that others think differently than we do.

    During the late 1950 the Soviet Union was keen to copy everything that the west did regarding popular culture to show that they could do it just as well as the Americans and the Europeans. They sort of had a chip on their shoulder and wanted to prove that they were good enough to run with the big boys. In response to films such as "Ben Hur" and "Gone With The Wind", they geared up their own state sponsored film industry to produce 'epics'. This is one of them. Five and a half hours of the Russian experience in grand scope and scale.

    Some have said that this is the Russian version of "Gone With The Wind", but it is more closely tied to "Dr. Zhivago" in theme and tone. The film deals with a portion of history rarely seen in the west. The internal struggles of a nation in the midst of Civil War in what could best be described as the Wild West of Russia.

    This film is long with slow pacing. Russian cinema does not move a story along at a fast pace. Characters are built slowly and relationships between them are complex and wide ranging. The scenery is beautiful but sparse, as befits the Russian hinterlands. This is mostly a rural 'people' film, without much else to distract the audience, such as machinery or large scenes in cities. It is intimacy played out on a very broad canvas.

    One of the more peculiar things about this version of the film is the narration. The film is shown in it's original language with no subtitles. The characters are narrated, not voiced over. So when someone speaks, it is in their native tongue, and then an English voice speaks what they are saying, sort of like you are reading their mind in delayed time. It preserves more of the feel of the film, but takes a little getting used to.

    The other thing that was noticeable about the film was the Foley work. Sounds such as breaking glass or gun shots were VERY loud and distracted from the film at times. In a fist fight early in the film, the sounds of fists hitting the actors faces sounded like a sack of rice dropped from two stories up and hitting a wooden floor.

    Unless you watch this film very closely, without distraction, it is easy to get lost in the complexity of the story. I was often left wondering who were the Reds (Communists) were and who were the Whites (Loyalists) and who was fighting whom. This film assumes that the audience has a good understanding of this time in Russian history, much like most American audiences have a good understanding of who Benjamin Franklin and Paul Revere were.

    What this film left me with was a better understanding of the mind set of the Russian people and how they perceive their world and their place in it. They are pragmatic for a reason and see the journey of life as a hard and difficult thing. There is no "pursuit of happiness" in their character. There is only finding happiness where it lays and enjoying it while you can.
    8jherr

    Great Cossack Epic

    I would highly recommend this film to anyone that is interested in Cossack history and culture and/or early Soviet history. However, if you don't already have an interest in these areas, you will likely find the films very slow and boring. All three parts take some patience to watch due to their length and pacing, especially the first part which really isn't all that exciting and is more of a soap opera as others have mentioned.

    A couple bits of advice for the foreign/western viewer:

    1. The first part may not be as exciting as the last two, but it introduces you to all the characters in the film and fleshes out their relations to each other. To get the most out of the parts 2 and 3, it is important to make an effort to put names to faces and note how each character is related to each other.

    2. The films were made for audiences that already had some knowledge of Cossacks and this period in history (WWI, Russian revolution, and the civil war). There are scenes that take place in parts 2 and 3 that no background information is given on, and if you are not familiar with the history will be somewhat confusing. It is highly recommended that one do a little reading online on Cossack history during this period before viewing this miniseries. It would also help to have a basic understanding of Russian revolution and subsequent civil war.
    10Boba_Fett1138

    A large scale epic like only the Soviets were capable off.

    Those Soviets surely were not holding back spending their rubles on large scale productions at the time. This over 6 hour long epic production is not just epic in its running time. It's an epic movie in basically all of its sequences and the movie gets filled with some impressive battle sequences as well. The Soviets were basically the pioneers in how large scale battles and battle sequences in general got brought to the screen. Another and even better example (and longer) of this is the even larger 1967 Soviet movie production of war and peace; "Voyna i mir".

    The way I see this movie it's basically a tribute to the Cossacks. They get presented as a proud, noble and hard working community of farmers, who fight and give their lives for mother Russia in its most dyer times. The backbone of Russia so to speak. Hyme to the Cossacks could had been a title for this time.

    Appearantly there also is a short version of this all somewhere available for the international market, which is a good thing. Although the story is always great, 6 hours is of course a long time to watch anything. I can also imaging an 2 hour movie telling exactly the same story and just as good. The movie perhaps repeat itself too often and all that at times seems to be happening are a bunch of characters sitting around either eating, drinking or being depressed.

    But no, it's not like the movie ever turns into a weak one. It's far too well done for that, even when the movie is turning slow. Its story and characters always make sure that you'll stay interested throughout.

    A real large scale cinematic accomplishment about love and war, in the early 20th century southern Russia countryside.

    10/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    9salisburyfrancis

    A Classic

    There's something about Russian films made around this time which are simply brilliant. 6 hours pass very quickly. Pure Genius
    9stevezhang

    A great grabbing and entertaining epic film

    The film contains 3 parts, each of which is close to 2 hours.

    Here are what I like: 1. This film accurately depicted an agricultural society before the industrial revolution. People used oil lamps. Most people were not well educated. There was no sliced bread. You need to slice bread when you eat. People ate potato, bread, drank milk and soup. There were no in-door plumbing.

    2. People's psyches were also very typical of a pre-industrial society. Everyone in the Cossack community were Orthodox Christian. The basic moral fiber was well and strong. Multi-generations lived in a large household. Young people were hooked up by marriage brokers. Young people needed family patriarch's blessing before they could marry.

    In other words, you would feel people's psyches and the society at large were very much like the Chinese society before China felt the impact of industrial revolution.

    I felt very familiar with the characters and their surroundings. In fact, I felt the men and women were so intimate to me, that I felt really strongly about their joy, anxiety, and anguish.

    3. Politics was a central theme in this movie. The novel and the film did a great job in depicting the reality of Russia during the tumultuous years of War World I and the Civil War following the Boshevik revolution.

    4. Watching the film, I hated the communists who pretended to be pacifists during War World I, and then showed their ugly face by pushing the country into a 3-year long extremely bloody civil war after War World I ended.

    5. Overall, the protagonist, Grigory Melekhov, is a freedom loving, traditionalist with a humanist world view. The communists had the inhumane view of class warfare, and were power mongers.

    6. It is amazing that the movie makers were able to make the movie without a single brush of communist propaganda. The movie didn't villanize either side. Nor did it promote, or aggrandize either side.

    7. I didn't read the novel. It was said that the adaptation to film lost the richness of the novel. On the basis of the film, I'd say the story structure is a very good epic structure.

    8. It is a very dramatic and moving story. With a lot of colorful characters, with rich and interesting characterizations.

    9. The 4th DVD contains special features. There were an interview with Ellina Bystritskaya who played Aksinya and an interview with Zinaida Kirienko who played Natalya. Both interviews were done in 2002, I believe. They are quite interesting.

    Here are what I felt could be better: 10. There is a soap opera feeling to the film. The characters are not very deep.

    11. There were many drinking and eating scenes, which became repetitive.

    12. The ending is not satisfactory. The novel was originally circulated in 1928, under Stalin's regime. It would have been banned in Soviet Union if it had a satisfactory ending to my taste. So, I really don't expect more.

    13. All characters were quick at saying negative things, and none were good at saying positive things.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Original Russian film is 340 minutes long (film length 9,582 m). It was reduced to 107 minutes for international distribution.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Zhizn odna... (1987)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Quiet Flows the Don?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • juin 1958 (Corée du Nord)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Union soviétique
    • Langue
      • Russe
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Quiet Flows the Don
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Odessa, Ukraine
    • Société de production
      • Kinostudiya imeni M. Gorkogo
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      5 heures 30 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Elina Bystritskaya and Pyotr Glebov in Le Don paisible (1957)
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    By what name was Le Don paisible (1957) officially released in Canada in English?
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