The Last Port
Appearance
The Last Port | |
---|---|
Directed by | Arnold Kordyum |
Based on | The Death of the Squadron by Alexander Korneychuk |
Music by | Viktor Kosenko |
Production company | Ukrainfilm |
Release date |
|
Language | Silent |
The Last Port (Russian: Последнии порта; Ukrainian: Oстанні порти) is a monophonic black-and-white film written and directed by filmmaker Arnold Kordyum (1890–1969) after Alexander Korneychuk's 1933 play The Death of the Squadron (Gibel eskadry).[1][2] Produced by Ukrainfilm in 1934 to be released on 19 January 1935,[3] it starred Pyotr Masokha (1904–1991), Sergei Minin (1901–1937) and Ladislav Golichenko, with film score by Viktor Kosenko.
Plot summary
[edit]On the struggle of the communist sailors with the White Guards and the German occupiers in the Crimea during the civil war.
Cast
[edit]- Sergei Minin as Commissioner of the Black Sea Fleet
- Pavel Kiyansky as Naval officer
- Pyotr Masokha as Envoy of the Baltic Fleet
- N. Bukaev as Sailor with a bandage
- Arnold Kordyum as Sailor with accordion
- Luka Lyashenko as Sailor from Priluk
- I. Marx as Old worker
- Lydia Ostrovskaya-Kurdyum as Working woman
- Dmitri Erdman as Lieutenant
- Pavel Petrik as German officer (as P. Petrik)
- A. Doroshkevich as Petliurist
- Mikhail Gornatko as Interventionist commissioner
- Stepan Shagaida as Admiral
- L. Golichenko as Sterna — boatswain
- Mikhail Gayvoronsky as Aleksandr Zapolsky
- Boris Karlash-Verbitsky as Sailor
- A. Kerner
References
[edit]- ^ Stites, Richard (1995). Culture and Entertainment in Wartime Russia. Indiana University Press. p. 122. ISBN 0253209498.
- ^ Cosand, Walter. "V S Kosenko" (PDF). Retrieved 25 July 2013.
- ^ Richard Taylor, Ian Christie (2012). The Film Factory: Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents 1896-1939. Routledge. p. nn. ISBN 978-1135082512.
External links
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