Brigade Commander Ivanov

Brigade Commander Ivanov (Russian: Комбриг Иванов, romanized: Kombrig Ivanov) is a 1923 Soviet silent comedy film directed by Aleksandr Razumny.[1] It was released in the United States as Beauty and the Bolshevik.[2]

Brigade Commander Ivanov
Directed byAleksandr Razumny
CinematographyAleksandr Razumny
Production
company
Proletkino
Release date
24 October 1923
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageSilent
Russian intertitles

Plot

People cheerfully greet the brigade red troopers who have arrived in the village to rest. As Brigade Commander Ivanov comes to stay in the house of the priest he falls in love with his daughter. Their marriage plans are hindered by religious prejudices as the priest's daughter insists on the wedding to be in the church ...

Cast

  • Pyotr Leontyev as Brigade Commander Ivanov
  • N. Belyayev as priest
  • Mariya Blyumental-Tamarina priest's wife
  • Olga Tretyakova as Olympiada, priest's daughter
  • G. Volkonskaya as baker of communion bread
  • Maria Arnazi-Borshak as komsomol member
  • Vsevolod Massino as komsomol member
  • Leonid Konstantinovskiy as komsomol member
gollark: I'm not really sure what other inferences I can reasonably make, but I assume you're between 13 and 18 or so given the general demographics here.
gollark: Also, I think you accidentally at least heavily implied you're in the US!
gollark: Everyone knows you need AT LEAST three dimensions.
gollark: one-dimensional political spectrum: too reductive.
gollark: I'll have to try and work on this. Easy search across a book library is too powerful to ignore.

References

Bibliography

  • Christie, Ian & Taylor, Richard. The Film Factory: Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents 1896-1939. Routledge, 2012.


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