King Lear -- Kozintsev (1971)seeders: 1
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King Lear -- Kozintsev (1971) (Size: 1.94 GB)
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Korol Lir -- Grigori Kozintsev & Iosif Shapiro (1971)
AKA King Lear ............................................................................... Spoken language: Russian English subs (idx/sub) Original rip from Karagarga (igorert) ............................................................................... Script: Grigori Kozintsev & Boris Pasternak From the play by W. Shakespeare Camera: Jonas Gritsius Original Music: Dimitri Shostakovitch Cast Jüri Järvet ... King Lear (as Yuri Yarvet) Elza Radzina ... Goneril (as E. Radzina) Galina Volchek ... Regan (as G. Volchek) Valentina Shendrikova ... Cordelia (as V. Shendrikova) Oleg Dal ... Fool (as O. Dal) Karl Sebris ... Glocester (as K. Sebris) Leonhard Merzin ... Edgar (as L. Merzin) Regimantas Adomaitis ... Edmund (as R. Adomaytis) Vladimir Yemelyanov ... Kent (as V. Yemelyanov) Aleksandr Vokach ... Cornwall (as A. Vokach) Donatas Banionis ... Albany (as D. Banionis) Aleksei Petrenko ... Oswald (as A. Petrenko) Juozas Budraitis ... King of France (as I. Budraytis) ............................................................................... SOME OPINIONS FROM IMDB ............................................................................... Shakespeare's plays are difficult to realize on stage or on film. Reading through his plays, one gets the impression that they are greater than they can ever be performed. But there are those few productions that hit the mark and do his works justice. So it is with Korol Lir (King Lear), Grigori Kozintsev's final film. In 1964, Kozintsev's Hamlet was released and earned high praise both in Russia and the West. As a consequence, Kozintsev was invited to and attended many western film festivals including Cannes. Kozintsev cherished these trips to the west as he was able to see many films that were not shown in the Soviet Union. He was particularly eager to see the films of Kurosawa, Ford, Capra and Fellini. But it was the films of Orson Welles, Citizen Kane in particular, that made the deepest impression on him. In fact it was Citizen Kane that inspired Kozintsev to film King Lear in black-and-white rather than in color. There are so many wonderful touches in this film starting with Yuri Yarvets' harrowing portrayal of the mad Lear. His Lear always leaves me feeling crushed at the end of the film. Superb as well is the eerie, haunting performance of Galina Volchek as Regan and the outstanding cinematography of Jonas Gritsius. Of course there is also the translation used which is itself a masterpiece, by Boris Pasternak no less (the fool's songs were performed with translations by Samuil Marshak however). Dmitri Shostakovich's score is exactly what you would expect: genius. Here is no simple sonic wallpaper to play along as images move about the screen. Neither does this dark score overwhelm the on-screen action but rather acts as a wordless narrator, commenting on the drama as it unfolds. At the heart of all this is Kozintsev's bleak and powerful vision of King Lear. There are no gimmicks here, no attempts to "update", no trace of the portentousness and pomposity that mars many films based on Shakespeare. Here, the tragedy is revealed with a brutal and simple honesty. It is not only Lear and those around him who suffer but his whole nation suffers and decays alongside him. Seeing this film from first to final scene is a draining emotional experience (IMDB theelegantdandyfop). ............................................................................... This version of King Lear is an incredible achievement due to the masterful adaptation from the Shakespeare original by one of the best Russian poets, writers, and translators of the last century, Boris Pasternak; elegant and powerful images by the cinematographer Jonas Gritsius (he also worked with Grigori Kozintsev on the earlier Shakespeare's adaptation, "Hamlet", 1964), the music of Dimity Shostakovich, and the great performances from all actors. Estonian actor Jüri Järvet is masterful as the mad king in a performance which is reminiscent of Kinski as another brilliant madman - Aguirre. They were even the same age when they played Aguirre and Lear. The whole cast is amazing: Kozintsev chose the best actors possible for his project and everyone delivers. I'd like to mention Oleg Dal as the touching Fool; Karl Sebris as the Duke of Gloucester, whose scenes with his son Edgar after having been blinded are very moving; Regimantas Adomaitis as Edmund, a treacherous son and brother but a brilliant man; and Donatas Banionis (who played the main character in Tarkovsky's Solaris) as an intelligent and noble Albany. But like I said, everyone and everything is just perfect in this little known but IMO, the Best adaptation of the beloved and one of the most wrenching tragedies in the English and in the world literature (IMDB Galina) ............................................................................... Black and white cinematography of Gritsius, the music of Shostakovich and the enigmatic face of Jarvet, make all other versions of King Lear smaller in stature. Lord Olivier himself acknowledged the stark brilliance of this film. Oleg Dal's fool lends a fascinating twist to the character. The "Christian Marxism" of Kozintsev can knock-out any serious student of cinema and Shakespeare. Kozintsev is one of least sung masters of Russian cinema. His cinema is very close to that of Tarkovsky and Sergei Paradjanov. Kozintsev's Lear is not a Lear that mourns his past and his daughters--his Lear is close to the soil, the plants, and all elements of nature. That's what makes Kozintsev's Shakespearean works outstanding (IMDB Jugu Abraham) ............................................................................... SPECS File Name .............: Korol.Lir..Kozintsev.*.avi (*=1,2) File Size (in bytes) ..: 1,012,027,930/1,061,963,854 bytes Runtime (# of frames) .: 1:06:52/1:04:56 (100280/97386 frames) Video Codec ...........: XviD 1.0 RC4 (Hola) Frame Size ............: 704x304 [=2.316] FPS ...................: 25.000 Video Bitrate .........: 1880/2043 kb/s Bits per Pixel ........: 0.351/0.382 bpp B-VOP, N-VOP, QPel, GMC ......: [B-VOP]...[]...[]...[] Audio Codec ...........: 0x0055 MPEG-1 Layer 3 Sample Rate ...........: 48000 Hz Audio bitrate .........: 128 kb/s [2 channel(s)] CBR audio Interleave ............: 40 ms No. of audio streams ..: 1 *********************************** FREAKYFLICKS ****************************** FreakyFlicks is a free and open community dedicated to preserving and sharing cinematic art in the digital era. Our goal is to disseminate such works of art to the widest audience possible through the channels provided by P2P technology. 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