Prince Vladimir (film)
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Prince Vladimir | |
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Release poster |
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Directed by | Yuriy Kulakov |
Produced by | Andrey Dobrunov |
Written by | Andrey Dobrunov Yuriy Batanin Yuriy Kulakov |
Starring | Yuri Berkun Irina Bezrukova Sergei Bezrukov Olga Churayeva Vladimir Gostyukhin |
Music by | Sergei Starostin Ighor Zhuravlev (songs) Alexander Pinegin (songs) Andrei Usachev (songs) |
Cinematography | Mariya Erohina |
Editing by | Sergei Minakin |
Distributed by | CASCADE-FILM (in CIS and Baltic countries) |
Release date(s) | February 23, 2006 (Russia) |
Running time | 78 min |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Budget | $5,000,000 |
Followed by | Prince Vladimir - The Feat (2008) |
Official website | |
IMDb profile |
Prince Vladimir (Russian: Кня́зь Влади́мир, Knyaz Vladimir), or Prince Vladimir - Part One: The Choice (Кня́зь Влади́мир. Вы́бор) is a 2006 Russian traditionally-animated feature film loosely based on the story of Prince Vladimir, a historically important figure who converted Kievan Rus' (a predecessor state of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine) to Christianity a thousand years ago. The film's production was blessed by Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexius II in 1998, and in 2000 it was granted the status of a national film and given government support.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The plot follows the events surrounding Vladimir from childhood and into adulthood.
In the beginning of the film, being under the influence of the high priest Krivzha, the Prince is a young, impulsive and cruel pagan. Fighting for supreme power, Vladimir wins a battle that kills his brother. Regretting what he has done, Vladimir does not suspect a conspiracy between the priest and the Pechenegs. Vladimir is concerned about gathering the Slavic tribes into one united state. Solving this major task, he faces obstacles, which Vladimir overcomes in the end, defeating Krivzha and winning the battle against Kurya, a Pecheneg chief.
[edit] Characters
- Prince Vladimir
Grandson of the legendary princess Olga and son of great commander Svyatoslav.
- Krivsha
A priest and wizard, pontificates on behalf of Perun, Prince Vladimir's prime martial god, but in fact just skillfully shelters himself behind this, only wishing absolute power. There is gossip that he did bad things while in the guise of a bear, but those who saw him in this guise have gone missing.
- Alexei (Aleksha)
An inquisitive and clever boy. Having lost his parents, he has been fostered by his grandfather.
A Pecheneg Prince. Used to be at enmity with Prince Svyatoslav, Vladimir's father. Since then, he has been a cruel and imperious leader of half-wild steppe tribe, planning and doing everything to invade Russian lands and harry Kiev.
- Boyan
A kind and honorable old man. "The wood grandsire" - he is a part of the nature in which he lives. A fair pagan, talks with living trees and worship them. His staff is a home for bees, which tell him about all the news of the wood. Boyan is a personification of ancient Slavic wisdom, open-mindedness and patience.
A waywode, Prince Vladimir's uncle and tutor. Harsh and straightforward. A warrior of tremendous power, sophisticated, whole-hearted in his devotion to the young Prince. Heads the Slavic troops.
- Olaf the Red-haired
A centurion. Used to be a waywode of Norwegian sea-king Harald the Blue Teeth's troops. Disagreed about carving-up the spoils of war, left the sea-king and now swears to serve young Prince Vladimir. A brave and cruel warrior.
- Hoten and Kostyanin
Brothers, Boyan's sons. Both are giants. Always together, and always searching for places where they can boast of their bravery.
- Olga
Waywode Dobrynya's daughter. Grew up without a mother, a playful and lively girl.
- Giyar
A son of Pecheneg Prince Kuri. A petty proudling, Alexei's everlasting rival.
- Anastasius
An adviser of the Byzantine Emperor.
- Byzantine Emperor
A wise politician, who sees in Russia not a rival or enemy but a possible ally, a defendant of orthodox Christians from eastern barbarians.
A Byzantine Czarevna and beauty. A sister of Byzantine emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII. Clever and proud-hearted.
Vladimir's elder brother and by the will of Heaven – an obstacle on his way to the power.
[edit] Background
This is the first film to focus on the story of Prince Vladimir.
Production started in 1997 - research into the customs of the time period as well as character design took place. Originally, the story was supposed to be told through a series of 30-minute shorts, but the idea was scrapped. The first proposal presentation of Prince Vladimir took place on April 17, 2000, at the Russian Cultural Fund. Soon after, work began in earnest, and about 120 animators were employed on the film. At the 2002 Annecy International Animated Film Festival, Prince Vladimir was named one of the world's 12 most anticipated upcoming animated films.[1] The first official presentation of the finished film took place on February 3rd, 2006, for the press.
A sequel, Prince Vladimir - The Feat (Князь Владимир. Подвиг) is scheduled for release in 2008.
[edit] Reception
Many in the public thought that the film was part of the light-hearted "3 bogatyrs" trilogy ([2]) by Melnitsa Animation Studio (the second film in the trilogy, Dobrynya Nikitich and Zmey Gorynych, was due for release on March 16), and were surprised and dismayed at the film's serious tone. Critical reaction was relatively positive, but mixed. Critics praised the film's art and animation but criticized it for its innaccurate portrayal of the historical period and for perceived ideological pandering to its main sponsor, the Russian Orthodox Church.[3]
It is the highest-grossing Russian animated film of all time, taking in over five million dollars since its release, and is the third highest-grossing animated film within Russia (behind Madagascar and Flushed Away). [4][5] Because it cost $5 million to make, however (far more than Melnitsa's films, which are made for about $300,000), the film is thought to have either lost money or narrowly broken even.
[edit] Voice cast
Actor | Role(s) |
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Yuriy Berkun | Kurya |
Irina Bezrukova | Anna |
Sergei Bezrukov | Prince Vladimir |
Olga Churayeva | Olga |
Vladimir Gostyukhin | Olaf the Red-Haired |
Sasha Kostrichkin | Alexei |
Vasiliy Lanovoy | The Byzantine Emperor |
Dmitriy Nazarov | Dorbinya |
Aleksandr Pinegin | Boyan |
Kolya Rastorguev | Prince Giyar |
Rogvold Sukhoverko | Krivzha |
Olga Zhuravlyova | Olga |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official website (English version)
- Knyaz Vladimir at the Internet Movie Database
- Trailers (the ones on the official website don't work)
- An informative St. Petersburg Times article about the production and the future of Russian animation
- Andrei Ryabovitchev's blog (there is some info and artwork from the film in the 2005-early 2006 entries)