5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A very moving, well-acted historical drama, deserves wider release on DVD., 27 July 2001
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Author:
silverwhistle (docm@silverwhistle.free-online.co.uk) from Glasgow, Scotland
I had long been waiting for this film to come out, the real-life
tragedy on which it is based being a subject I have done extensive
research on. It is a *beautiful* film, highlighting a heartbreaking
historical story which for too long was glossed over or justified in
Russia by Nikolai I and Stalin alike.
Aleksei Zuev gives a sensitive performance in the title role: a fragile
intellectual, damaged by parental abuse and illness, but essentially
good-hearted. His stress-induced alcoholism is not glossed over, and
his frail appearance suggests his tuberculosis (although the film omits
to show him coughing into the cherry-coloured silk handkerchiefs listed
in his wardrobe). The viewer wants to protect him from harm, which is
precisely the emotion Aleksei should evoke.
Viktor Stepanov is made up to look scarily like portraits of Peter I by
Nikitin. His mercurial temperament - from bullying to paranoid
insecurity to hale-fellow-well-met roistering - is ably conveyed.
Menshikov, Ekaterina and Tolstoi scheme away in the background... This
is a glittering court riddled with danger and corruption - exactly as
it should be.
The opening shots of the film allude to Serov's early 20C history
painting of Peter on a construction site, and there are a no. of visual
references to classic paintings in the film. The use of genuine 18C
Peterburg locations such as the Menshikov Palace, the Summer Palace,
and the Peter and Paul Fortress is highly effective. Sadly, budget
constraints clearly meant the characters' sojourn in Naples had to be
omitted!
The main weaknesses in characterisation are regarding the heroine,
Afrosin'ya, but that is no fault of the appealing young actress
Ekaterina Kulakova. It's because the script relies on the inconsistent
characterisation given her in Merezhkovskii's heavily Symbolist and
misogynistic source novel, which is not borne out by the real-life
Afrosin'ya's letters. I also doubt whether Peter shed many tears, but
again, this is taken from Merezhkovskii. Viewers almost certainly will,
though.
This is a brave movie which deserves a wider audience. Earlier film
treatments of the same story, in Petrov's 'Peter the Great' and the NBC
mini-series of the 1980s (which I have also reviewed), portrayed
Aleksei as a furtive, scheming traitor. His depiction as a poignantly
sympathetic figure is a great step forward, equivalent to the impact of
Ge's 1871 painting, 'Peter I interrogates Tsarevich Aleksei at
Peterhof', which is visually quoted in the film. While the Russian film
industry may be hindered by financial problems it clearly can still
produce good quality costume dramas with international appeal.
PLEASE PLEASE can someone issue this film as an international subtitled
edition DVD?!!!
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