War and Peace, Part I: Andrei Bolkonsky

Alternate title(s):
Foreign Title: Voyna i mir
Date: January 01, 1966 to December 31, 1966
Dates Note: 1966
Country of Origin: USSR
Place of Origin: USSR
Languages: Russian , French
Color: Color
Silent: No
Based On: The novel by Leo Tolstoy
Additional Info:


Curator Notes

Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
Limited Engagements & Special Screenings 2019
Description: 

In 1969, Roger Ebert proclaimed Sergei Bondarchuk’s War and Peace “the definitive epic of all time,” and no film has come along since to contradict that assessment. Bondarchuk undertook the adaptation of the revered Russian novel with all the resources of the Soviet state at his disposal, including priceless museum artifacts as props and literal armies of extras. He also drew on a full arsenal of sixties stylistics: gliding across glittering halls, swooping over battlefields, or lurching through drunken parties, his camera alternates between a God’s-eye view and a radical subjectivity. Following good-hearted Pierre (Bondarchuk), battle-scarred Andrei (Vyacheslav Tikhonov), and tempestuous Natasha (Lyudmila Savelyeva) through the tumult of the Napoleonic Wars, the seven-hour, Academy Award–winning War and Peace hews closely to Tolstoy both in outline and in scope, oscillating between historic magnitude and intimate detail.

Part I moves from ballroom to battlefield, introducing the principal characters at a series of lavish parties before Prince Andrei departs for military service and participates in the disastrous Battle of Austerlitz. Back home, illegitimate son Pierre is summoned to the deathbed of his father, a count. Themes of death and birth, despair and hope are evoked in lamplit interiors and ravishing images of the natural world, leading Andrei toward more than one epiphany.

Authors/Roles: 
Juliet Clark


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