Mutiny (1928 film)
Mutiny (Russian: Мятеж, romanized: Myatezh) is a 1928 Soviet war drama film directed by Semyon Tymoshenko based on the novel of the same name by Dmitry Furmanov.[1][2]
Mutiny | |
---|---|
Russian: Мятеж | |
Directed by | Semyon Tymoshenko |
Written by | Mikhail Bleiman Semyon Tymoshenko |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Leonid Patlis |
Production company | Sovkino |
Release date | 1928 |
Running time | 87 min. |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Plot
Central Asia during the Civil War. The Jarkent battalion of the Red Army, located in the Verny (now Alma-Ata), receives an order from Frunze to go to the Fergana region to fight the Basmachi. A group of kulaks, with the support of local merchants and beys, incites the unconscious, wavering mass of the Red Army to revolt. The anti-Soviet agitation of counter-revolutionaries, demagogically exploiting the mood of war weariness, provokes an open mutiny in the battalion.[3]
Cast
- Pyotr Podvalny as Mikhail Frunze
- Aleksey Alekseev as Dmitry Furmanov
- Tatyana Guretskaya as Naya Furmanova
- Boris Babochkin as Karavaev[4]
- Pyotr Kirillov as partisan Eryskin
- Valery Solovtsov as Vinchetsky
- Nikolay Zimenko as Shegabutdinov
Critical response
Film critic Mikhail Bleiman observed:[5]
Working with a benevolent viewer in mind does not educate him, but only excites him for a second. This primitive method was used to make Mutiny. It is made with the expectation of constant reaction, guaranteed applause. That is why the film did not like the filmmakers who watched the work, and liked the Red Army men who watched the events for the first time.