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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| LETTER NEVER SENT (NEOTRAVLENNOYE PISMO) (director: Mikhail Kalatozov; screenwriters: Grigori Koltunov/Valeri Osipov/Viktor Rozov/based on a story by Valeri Osipov; cinematographer: Sergei Urusevsky; editor: N. Anikina; music: Nikolai Kryukov; cast: Tatyana Samojlova (Tanya), Yevgeni Urbansky (Sergei), Innokenti Smoktunovsky (Kostya Sabinin), Vasili Livanov (Andrei), Galina Kozhakina (Vera); Runtime: 96; MPAA Rating: NR; The Criterion Collection; 1959-Russia-in Russian with English subtitles) |
| "Classic socialist realism film
that is enhanced by erotic melodramatics and
powerful stylish nature images."
Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Mikhail
Kalatozov ("The Cranes Are Flying"/"I Am Cuba"/"The
Red Tent") passionately directs this black-and-white
shot classic socialist realism film, that is enhanced
by erotic melodramatics and powerful stylish nature
images. It's based on a story by Valeri Osipov, and
the intense screenplay is penned by Osipov, Grigori
Koltunov, and playwright Viktor
Rozov. It features the stunningly forceful
photography of the director's regular collaborator Sergei
Urusevsky. The emphasis is on the fragility of mankind
in its struggles to survive and conquer the forces of
nature that inflict such events as unruly waters,
freezing conditions, gusting winds, and raging forest
fires. It's second theme is that mankind has an
obligation to seek progress to make the world a better
place to live in. It
follows four dedicated Russians, a guide and 3
geologists, on their third expedition to find diamonds
in the wilderness of the Central Siberian Plateau, an
area called Taiga. Their leader is Kostya Sabinin
(Innokenti Smoktunovsky),
who is writing a passionate diary type of letter
to his wife Vera (Galina Kozhakina)
back in Moscow that is never sent and the source
for the film's title. The group's guide is the
bachelor Sergei (Yevgeni
Urbansky), and the other two
geologists are the lovebirds Andrei (Vasili
Livanov) and the pretty Tanya (Tatyana
Samojlova). Tension arises when
Sergei's crush on Tanya comes out in the open and
how in a confrontation between the men Sergei
expresses wonder how someone as lovely as Tanya
can be in love with such a spineless creature as
the bookish Andrei. The first half of the film
covers the hardships of the rugged expedition,
where the scientists fight their negative thoughts
as they explore to no avail the vast area in the
summer and fight for survival in the harsh
landscape. The
film's second half is in the autumn, when they
find the diamond field and name it Octahedron. But
in trying to get back to their base camp, they get
trapped in a wilderness forest fire and after
radioing their base camp about their discovery
lose all communication. When they start dying off
one-by-one and the search by plane can't locate
them, their main concern becomes the noble one to
make sure they bring out the map so their fellow
Soviets would benefit from their discovery. In the
end, there's one frozen survivor rescued by
helicopter and the map is found on the survivor in
the hopes the political leaders
can now carry out the dream of the Communist country
to prosper and advance civilization. The
flaws are that the storyline is slight, all the
characters are undeveloped and the selfless heroic
deeds seemed required film-making according to
Communist doctrine to pass the censors and not
inspired storytelling. REVIEWED ON 1/15/2013 GRADE: B+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |