Friday, October 24
The
Cranes Are Flying
dir. Mikhail Kalatozov, Russia 1957
Mikhail Kalatozov's luscious portrait of love and loss during World
War II stars almond-eyed beauty Tatyana Samojlova and handsome Aleksei
Batalov as moony-eyed young lovers whose innocent romance is shattered
by war. When the idealistic boy volunteers for service, his draft-dodging
cousin steals the despondent girl by brute force, yet she never gives
up on her true love, even when he's reported dead. Kalatozov's patriotic
paean to fallen soldiers and home-front heroes is an undeniably sentimental
melodrama suffused with lush images and lyrical sequences, a kind
of cinematic poetry unseen in Soviet cinema since the experimentation
and optimism of the silent days. Produced during the "thaw"
following Stalin's repressive reign, it won the Palme d'Or prize at
the 1958 Cannes Film Festival and set Kalatozov on the road to more
ambitious expressions of Soviet idealism in the modern world, culminating
in his masterpiece, I Am Cuba. - Sean
Axmaker