Propala Hramota
Propala Hramota The Lost Letter | |
---|---|
Cossack Vasyl (played by Ivan Mykolaichuk) | |
Directed by | Borys Ivchenko |
Produced by | Dovzhenko Film Studios |
Written by | Ivan Drach |
Starring |
Vasyl Simchych Ivan Mykolaichuk Mykhailo Holubovych Lidia Vakula Fedir Stryhun |
Music by |
Ukrainian folklore Ivan Mykolaichuk (arranged) |
Cinematography | Vitaliy Zymovets |
Release dates | 1972 |
Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union (Ukrainian SSR) |
Language | Ukrainian |
Propala Hramota (Ukrainian: Пропала Грамота, The Lost Letter) is a 1972 Soviet musical-tragicomedy film by Dovzhenko Film Studios in Kiev. The movie is considered a pearl of Soviet and Ukrainian cinema. The film is based on the novella by Nikolai Gogol.
Synopsis
Cossack Vasyl (Ivan Mykolaichuk) prepares himself for a mounted voyage to Peterburg, the capital of the Russian Empire. Vasyl carries a hramota (sealed official document) given to him by the hetman through his secretary, Pereverny-kruchenko, that is rumored to cost ten Poods of gold. Vasyl's wife sews the hramota into his hat and his father (Vasyl Symchych) gives him magic tobacco to repel evil and an advice to find a good co-journeyman.
The film depicts the adventures of Vasyl in sequences that are filled with Ukrainian culture, and shows Ukrainian cuisine, costumes, traditions, mystical and comedy-filled situations, anecdotes, and a plethora of obstacles which Vasyl must overcome. On his way together with an evil servant (chort) he comes to a river crossing where a ferry carries people from one side to another. There he finds his partner in arms, Andriy, a zaporozhian cossack. Further along the way, something happens to the papers when they stop at an inn to rest. When Vasyl and Andriy arrive in St. Petersburg, they hand over the hramota to the baroness von Likhtenberg who passes them to the empress. The documents do not carry any information and Vasyl has to leave without results.
On the way home, both of them decide to shoot each other. As they are saying in unison the Nicene Creed (Apostles' Creed) they hear a voice that identifies itself as Kudz coming from a nearby rock, saying he was the same chort and the witch turned him into a rock after he helped Vasyl. Kudz asks them to throw him in a nearby marsh so as not to cause any further harm to random travelers on the road. As Vasyl arrives with his friend near their village, Dykanka, they meet a little boy who asks them to let him go to see the cossack, Vasyl who had supposedly returned from having seen the empress. Then they arrive and are met by the rest of the village population. Moments later, everybody awaits Vasyl again by his house to tell the story of his rendezvous with the empress. In the last scene, he wishes the little boy to have a loyal horse, an open field, and always be at people's service. The scene is accompanied by the triumphant Cossack march of the Ukrainian folkloric song about Sahaidachny.
Cast
- Ivan Mykolaichuk - cossack Vasyl
- Lidia Vakula - cossack's wife, the empress
- Fedir Stryhun - zaporozhets, cossack's partner
- Zemfira Tsakhilova - Odarka, baroness von Likhtenberg
- Mykhailo Holubovych - evil man (the role voiced actor Pavel Morozenko)
- He's seen on the background of the photo as the owner of the inn (Ukrainian: корчмар, korchmar) in the episode.
- Volodymyr Hlukhyi - weird man
- Vasyl Symchych - cossack's father
- Anatoliy Barchuk - cossack Ivan
- Volodymyr Shakalo - cossack Petro
Administrative issues
The film was supposed to be directed by Viktor Hres, featuring Anatoly Papanov in the lead role. However, when Hres became suddenly ill, he offered it to Borys Ivchenko. The latter agreed on the condition that the main role would be given to Ivan Mykolaychuk. The script was remade and the movie was filmed in 1972 at the Dovzhenko Film Studios. However, Soviet censors banned it from being screened. Nevertheless, in 1973 the Bureau of Soviet Cinematography Propaganda in Moscow published 50 thousand pamphlets with images of Ivan Mykolaychuk in role of Cossack Vasyl.
The movie was finally released after the fall of the Soviet Union. It received the Golden Pagoda award during the movie festival in Bangkok (see Cinema of Thailand). All the songs in the movie were contributed by Ivan Mykolaychuk, who also helped Ivan Drach write the movie's script.
See also
- The Lost Letter: A Tale Told by the Sexton of the N...Church (1831), by Mykola Hohol.
- The Lost Letter (1945), a Soviet, Russian-language cartoon filmed in Moscow.
- Annychka (1968), another film by Borys Ivchenko.
- Cinema of Ukraine
- Dovzhenko Film Studios
References
- Propala Hramota at the Internet Movie Database
- Brief overview at The New York Times as Propavshaya Gramota
- Some cast info