Locksmith and Chancellor
Directed byVladimir Gardin
Written by
CinematographyYevgeni Slavinsky
Production
company
Release date
1923
CountrySoviet Union
LanguagesSilent
Russian intertitles

Locksmith and Chancellor (Russian: Слесарь и Канцлер, romanized: Slesar i kantsler) is a 1923 Soviet silent film directed by Vladimir Gardin based on the play of Anatoli Lunacharsky.[1][2]

The film's art direction was by Vladimir Yegorov.

Synopsis

The Government of the fictional country Norland has unleashed a war with the neighboring Galikania and is suffering one defeat after another. A group of conspirators who were dissatisfied with this state of affairs, led by the Social Democrat Frank Frey arrange a coup to overthrew the emperor of Norland. But the working class does not like the new order either. Workers expose Frank Frey's policy of continuing the war and a revolution breaks out in the country. The leader of the socialist revolution becomes a mechanic of the name Franz Stark.

Cast

  • Ivan Khudoleyev as Emperor of Norland
  • Nikolai Panov as Chancellor von Turau
  • N. Tairova as von Turau's wife
  • Vladimir Gardin as Gammer
  • Vladimir Maksimov as Frank Frey, lawyer
  • Zoya Barantsevich as Countess Mitsi
  • Iona Talanov as Berenberg
  • Nikolai Saltykov as Franz Stark, locksmith
  • Lidiya Iskritskaya-Gardina as Anna
  • Oleg Frelikh as Leo von Turau
  • Ivan Kapralov as Robert von Turau
  • V. Valitskaya as Lora von Turau, Robert's wife
  • Olga Bystritskaya as Anna, Leo's lover
  • A. Semyonov as Netli, chancellor's secretary
  • M. Arnazi
  • Aleksandra Rebikova
  • Evgeniy Gryaznov
  • Karl Tomski
  • Nikolay Popov
  • Stepan Kuznetsov
  • Olga Preobrazhenskaya

References

  1. Jay Leyda (1960). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. p. 159.
  2. Sargeant p.1

Bibliography

  • Sargeant, Amy. Vsevolod Pudovkin: Classic Films of the Soviet Avant-garde. I.B.Tauris, 2001.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.