Istoriya odnogo naznacheniya (2018) Poster

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7/10
Conscience and career
hof-420 March 2024
In 1866, writer Lev Tolstoy met on a train with Lieutenant Grigory Kolokoltsev, on his way to his place of service, a regiment in Tula province. Kolokoltsev was an admirer of the writer and was received in Tolstoy's estate, Yasnaya Polyana. In one of his visits he told Tolstoy about a tragic incident in his regiment: the clerk Shabunin hit the company commander, for which he was facing a court martial and threatened with execution (this barbaric rule was not limited to the Russian army). No one (except for a few diehards) wished Shabunin dead, but circumstances brought his demise closer. His presence was inconvenient for everyone; from the sergeant major, whom he helped hide the theft of soldiers' money, to the colonel himself, facing an audit.

Tolstoy volunteered to be the defendant's lawyer and made a brilliant speech at the trial. Kolokoltsev was a member of the jury deciding Shabunin's fate and was faced with a stark choice between his conscience and the furthering of his career, which is the center of the movie. The original title is History of a Destination, Kolokoltsev's destination to his regiment.

The film shows what could be the root of Shabunin's plight, soldiers in relative reclusion in peacetime. Not unlike in a jail the strong are left alone, the weak are endlessly abused and bullied and sadistic, superannuated officers vent their frustrations by forcing soldiers into senseless exercises and discouraging good initiatives (such as alphabetization of the rank-and-file). We then begin to understand how Shabunin's rage led him to his fateful fit of violence.

Out of this material, director Avdotya Smirnova has assembled a period piece where the reconstruction of time and place is flawless, supported by excellent cinematography. Acting is uniformly good for all concerned, especially from the principals Aleksey Smirnov (Kolokoltsev) and Evgeniy Kharitonov (Tolstoy). A movie to watch.
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10/10
Bracings & Traditions (or what Russia stays of)
CupPusta14 September 2018
If present official Russian teachings place country's great (military) victories into a foundation stone of this state - then this biopic is not for you. Count Leo Tolstoy (born aristocrat, former officer and gambler, but in his mature years one of worlds' greatest humanitarian) wrote several stories depicting the Great Empire's reality. In this reality, if you have to survive, you better turn into a shrewed bureaucrat (or a low rank cheater) - and let all your youth ideals go. Russian Empire is the state to die for - and it feasts on deaths to survive. Faults are covered, or blamed on lower class, (apparently faulted) victimized individuals whose life cost nothing laid into unmarked graves and over our borders are our enemies only - all those values are seen in later days as well (compare with those of Stalin, or from present time). Authors show us a mirror to see us present through our past. Widows, corruption - who cares... As long as our victories are with us, and Czar (the Father) is well and alive in his grandiose - the country stays. Take all that away - what will be left of it?...
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