
Entre la gente
Parte 2 de la "Trilogía Gorki" de Donskoy
IMDb
Dirección: Mark Donskoy
Guión: Mark Donskoy, Ilya Gruzdev, Máximo Gorki (autobiografía)
Fotografía: Pyotr Yermolov
Escenografía: Ivan Stepanov
Dirección de Arte: I. Platonov
Sonido: David Blok, Vladimir Dmitriyev
Música original: Lev Shvarts
Compañía Productora: Soyuzdetfilm
País: Unión Soviética
Año: 1939
Duración: 96 minutos
Idioma: Ruso
Subtítulos: Español, inglés, francés, italiano, portugués, alemán y ruso opcionales en contenedor mkv
Reparto
Alex Lyarsky, Barbara Massalitinova, Mikhail Troyanovsky, Ivan Kudryavtsev, Hope Berezovskaya, Fedor Seleznev, Elizabeth Lilina, Irina Zarubina, Daria Zerkalova, Alexander Timontaev, M. Povolotskii, Nikolai Plotnikov, Ivan Chuvelev, K. Chugunov, V. Terentyev, Vyacheslav Novikov, Nikolai Gorlov, Vladimir Maruta, Anatoly Kubatsky
[quote]Sinopsis / Synopsis
El adolescente Aleksei Peshkov, quien luego tomaría el nombre de Máximo Gorki como escritor, desempeña distintos trabajos y conoce tanto la crueldad como la amabilidad de los extraños, y la magia escrita de las novelas, después de abandonar su precaria casa familiar para salir al encuentro de la vida y de la gente. "Entre la gente" es la segunda parte de la trilogía que el director soviético Mark Donskoi dedicó al escritor ruso, basándose en sus autobiografías. Al igual que en la primera parte, palpita la misma poesía en blanco y negro junto a impecables caracterizaciones.
My Apprenticeship (V lyudyakh) was the second entry in Russian director Mark Donskoy's "Maxim Gorki" trilogy. Picking up where 1938's My Childhood left off, the story covers the years in Gorki's life when the future writer (Alexei Lyarsky) was on his own, looking for a purpose and place in life. Before he can make up his own mind, Gorki is trapped into serfdom by a wealthy family. As he grows from his teen years to full manhood, Gorki fights his way towards freedom of thought and body. Based on Gorki's autobiography, the film was followed in 1940 by My Universities. My Apprenticeship has also been released as On His Own and Among People. (Hollywood.com)
We thought the Russians had dealt amply with his boyhood in "Childhood of Maxim Gorky" last September, but apparently they felt they had only scratched the surface of his life in old Nizhni Novgorod. In "On His Own," offered at the Cameo yesterday, young Maxim still is being kicked and cuffed by his elders, is looking wide-eyed at the world's misery and seeking stubbornly for some clue to the meaning and dignity of life. (...) Director Mark Donskoi again has conjured up so vivid a picture of Russia in the last century and has presented it so naturally that one has no thought of studio or actors, but accepts it as the work of some marvelous time and space machine. No film with its realistic quality of scene and performance can ever be completely dull. But it does drag through lack of dramatic and narrative continuity.(...) (New York Times, 11.13.1939)
[/quote]My Apprenticeship (V lyudyakh) was the second entry in Russian director Mark Donskoy's "Maxim Gorki" trilogy. Picking up where 1938's My Childhood left off, the story covers the years in Gorki's life when the future writer (Alexei Lyarsky) was on his own, looking for a purpose and place in life. Before he can make up his own mind, Gorki is trapped into serfdom by a wealthy family. As he grows from his teen years to full manhood, Gorki fights his way towards freedom of thought and body. Based on Gorki's autobiography, the film was followed in 1940 by My Universities. My Apprenticeship has also been released as On His Own and Among People. (Hollywood.com)
We thought the Russians had dealt amply with his boyhood in "Childhood of Maxim Gorky" last September, but apparently they felt they had only scratched the surface of his life in old Nizhni Novgorod. In "On His Own," offered at the Cameo yesterday, young Maxim still is being kicked and cuffed by his elders, is looking wide-eyed at the world's misery and seeking stubbornly for some clue to the meaning and dignity of life. (...) Director Mark Donskoi again has conjured up so vivid a picture of Russia in the last century and has presented it so naturally that one has no thought of studio or actors, but accepts it as the work of some marvelous time and space machine. No film with its realistic quality of scene and performance can ever be completely dull. But it does drag through lack of dramatic and narrative continuity.(...) (New York Times, 11.13.1939)




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Enlaces relacionados:
Detstvo Gorkogo (Mark Donskoy, 1938) DVDRip VOSE
Moi universitety (Mark Donskoy, 1940) DVDRip VOSE
La profesora rural (Mark Donskoy, 1947) DVDRip VOSE
Cine Soviético (1929-1991)