Ivan's Childhood

(Ivanovo detstvo)
(My Name Is Ivan)

Introduction/Nariman Skakov

 

  • Introduced by Nariman Skakov

    Stanford's Nariman Skakov is an expert on the work of Tarkovsky

featuring

Kolya Burlyaev, Valentin Zubkov, E. Zharikov, S. Krylov,

“A poetically directed antiwar film that also shows the beauty of the landscape.” —SFIFF 1962

Few debuts match the unequivocal power of Tarkovsky’s Ivan’s Childhood, a technical tour-de-force of flying crane shots, absurd angles, and arresting lighting merged with a powerful tale of war, violence, and childhood. Few are left alive along the Russian/German front of World War II, but twelve-year-old Ivan still moves, and still stalks, a young child turned into a “soldier boy.” Wandering through bombed-out ruins, birch forests, and frozen lands, Ivan is both hero and monster, innocence and decline, his only solace the memories of a mother long since missing. Ivan’s Childhood won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival, and announced the arrival of a major new talent.

Jason Sanders
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Mikhail Papava
  • Vladimir Bogomolov
Cinematographer
  • Vadim Yusov
Language
  • Russian
Print Info
  • B&W
  • 35mm