Shchors (film)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Shchors
Directed byOleksandr Dovzhenko
Yuliya Solntseva
Written byOleksandr Dovzhenko
StarringYevgeni Samojlov
Ivan Skuratov
Aleksandr Grechanyy
Aleksandr Khvylya
Nikolai Makarenko
Pyotr Masokha
CinematographyYuri Goldabenko
Yuriy Yekelchik
Edited byO. Skripnik
Music byDmitri Kabalevsky
Distributed byKiev Film Studio
Release date
  • January 1939 (1939-01)
Running time
92 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Shchors (Russian: Щорс) is a 1939 Soviet biopic film directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko and Yuliya Solntseva. Commissioned by Joseph Stalin,[1] the film is a biography of the partisan leader and Ukrainian Bolshevik Nikolai Shchors.[2] Shchors is played by Yevgeny Samoylov (1912–2006).

Synopsis

Cheered up by the revolutionary zeal, the courage and the energy of their leader Nikolai Alexandrovitch Shchors, in 1919 the peasants and workers groups gather in the devastated by the civil war in Ukraine, to defeat the foreign conquerors and enemies of the revolution. Shchors and his troops advance to Kiev, the seat of the bourgeois nationalists under their leader Symon Petliura, and take over the city. Other villages and towns fall. A bitter struggle with major losses blazes about Berdychiv. But Shchors' revolutionary forces remain victorious.

However, it does not take long until a new danger threatens: this time the Polish Pans enter Ukraine, and General Dragomirov marches to Kiev. Shchors, however, gathers the revolutionary forces of the country and brings them to a victorious counter-attack.

Cast

Production

Petro Kralyuk of the National University of Ostroh Academy claimed in 2020 that this film was ordered to be made by Joseph Stalin in order to make Mykola Shchors a mythical hero.[3] The script had to be reworked more than once, throwing out already filmed episodes of the film and shooting new ones.[3] The film was made during Stalin's Great Purge during many of Mykola Shchors fellow fighters were executed after being convicted of being traitors.[3] The stress this caused lead to director Oleksandr Dovzhenko having a heart attack.[3]

References

  1. ^ Jay Leyda (1960). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. pp. 353–355.
  2. ^ Emilia Kosnichuk (January 2008). Киноправда "Щорса" и кирпичи, из которых она строилась (in Russian). 4 (399). Ezhenedelnik 2000. Archived from the original on 2008-10-22. Retrieved 2008-11-04. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d "Ukrainian Starodubshchyna and Mykola Shchors, who fought against Ukraine. Does he need a monument in Kyiv?". Radio Free Europe (in Ukrainian). 31 October 2020. Retrieved 9 December 2023.

External links