Status

Released

original language

ru

Budget

$ 0

Revenue

$ 24173

Top Billed Cast

Анатолий Солоницын

Andrei Rublev

Иван Лапиков

Kirill

Микола Гринько

Daniil Chornyy

Николай Сергеев

Theophanus the Greek

Irma Raush

God's Fool

Николай Бурляев

Boriska

Юрий Назаров

Grand Duke / Minor Duke

Юрий Никулин

Patrikey

Ролан Быков

Buffoon

Николай Граббе

Stepan, Centurion of the Grand Duke

Михаил Кононов

Foma

Степан Крылов

Senior Foundry Worker

Болот Бейшеналиев

Tatar Khan

B. Matysik

Pyotr

Анатолий Обухов

Aleksey

Volodya Titov

Sergey

Nikolay Glazkov

Yefim

K. Aleksandrov

Семён Бардин

Hut Owner

Иван Быков

Г. Борисовский

Владимир Васильев

Monk

Зинаида Воркуль

Mariya

Александр Титов

Stepan, Foundryman

Виктор Волков

Carver

Ирина Мирошниченко

Mariya Magdalina

Тамара Огородникова

Jesus' Mother

Наталья Радолицкая

Girl Bathing

Николай Кутузов

Senior Hegumen

Дмитрий Орловский

Old Master

Владимир Гуськов

Игорь Донской

Jesus

Искендер Рыскулов

П. Макаров

Григорий Сочевко

Grand Prince's Warrior

Нелли Снегина

Marfa

Г. Покорский

Asanbek Umuraliev

Tatarin

Вячеслав Царёв

Andreyka

Иван Турченков

Man in the Hut (uncredited

Анатолий Никитин

Monk (uncredited)

П. Ермаков

Grand Prince's Warrior (uncredited)

Александр Петров

Foundry Worker (uncredited)

Николай Сибейкин

(uncredited)

Василий Цыганков

Peasant (uncredited)

Лариса Солоницына

(uncredited)

Anatoli Yabbarov

Monk (uncredited)

Клара Румянова

Duke's children (voice)

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Movie Reviews

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-08

Later canonised (in 1988!), this tells the story of the renowned Russian iconographist and fresco painter. His actual life, as you might expect from the early 15th century, is not well documented so Andrei Tarkovsky has, forgive the pun, a pretty blank canvas on which to draw us a portrait of the trials and tribulations of this inspired, misunderstood, suspected and troubled soul. It has an octuple, episodic, narrative that marries his own development as a man and an artist with the quite literally revolutionary goings on as his country is, frequently quite brutally, coming into some some semblance of cohesive existence. It focuses on the role of the church in this most religious, and superstitious, of nations and offers us a much less aggressive correlation between the communist Soviet threads so often prevalent in sate backed movies made at the time and of those iconic figures so prominent in Russian history. The imagery is creatively bamboozling at times; the story doesn't follow any linear a-b-c narrative and we are presented with an oblique interpretation not just of his life, but of life in an embryonic nation that is emerging from an almost primitive existence - and that is fascinating (if not always easy to follow and/or comprehend). It is the vision of the man in the title, but also of the man behind the camera - a startlingly effective sequence of beautifully photographed concepts that offer layers of complexities depicting human nature in pretty much all of it's guises. Surprisingly, for a film in excess of three hours, it flows effortlessly with Anatoliy Solonitsyn conveying an overwhelming sense of humanity with his character. If you can ever see it on a cinema screen, then it is definite a must - especially the last ten minutes or so which demonstrate (in glorious colour) some of his magnificent artistry.