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Andrey Rublyov
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Andrey Rublyov (1966) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
8.1/10   9,609 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 2% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Contact:
View company contact information for Andrei Rublev on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
1973 (USA) more
Genre:
Plot:
Andreiv Rublev charts the life of the great icon painter through a turbulent period of 15th Century Russian history... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
3 wins more
NewsDesk:
Andrei Tarkovsky Will Change Your Life
 (From Interview Magazine. 7 July 2009, 4:29 AM, PDT)

User Reviews:
What side will you take? more (81 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Anatoli Solonitsyn ... Andrei Rublyov
Ivan Lapikov ... Kirill
Nikolai Grinko ... Danil Chorny
Nikolai Sergeyev ... Theophanes the Greek
Irma Raush ... Idiot girl (Durochka)
Nikolay Burlyaev ... Boriska
Yuriy Nazarov ... The Grand Prince / The Lesser Prince
Yuri Nikulin ... Monk Patrikey
Rolan Bykov ... The jester
Nikolai Grabbe ... Stepan
Mikhail Kononov ... Foma
Stepan Krylov ... Head Bell-founder
Irina Miroshnichenko ... Mary Magdalene
Bolot Bejshenaliyev ... Tatar Khan
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
K. Aleksandrov
S. Bardin
E. Borisovsky
I. Bykov
Igor Donskoy ... Christ
Nikolai Glazkov ... Efim
Vladimir Guskov (as Vova Guskov)
Nikolai Kutuzov (as N. Kutuzov)
I. Loskoy
B. Matysik
Anatoli Obukhov
Tamara Ogorodnikova ... Mother of Jesus
Dmitri Orlovsky ... Old Stonemason
G. Pokorsky
P. Radolitskaya
Muratbek Ryskulov (as M. Ryskulov)
G. Sachevsko
Nelly Snegina ... Marfa (as N. Snegina)
Aleksandr Titov
Vladimir Titov (as Volodya Titov)
Slava Tsarev
A. Umuraliyev
Vasili Vasilyev (as Vasya Vasilyev)
Vladimir Volkov
Zinaida Vorkul
N. Vykov
more
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Андрей Рублёв (Soviet Union: Russian title)
Andrei Rublev (USA)
Strasti po Andreyu (Soviet Union: Russian title) (working title)
The Passion According to Saint Andrew (Europe: English title) (literal English translation of Russian working title)
more
Runtime:
Soviet Union:165 min (re-edited version) | Soviet Union:186 min (re-edited version) | UK:183 min (2004 re-release) | 205 min (original length) | UK:145 min (UK version)
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Anatoli Solonitsyn succeeded by coming to Mosfilm himself and offering to play the title role. more
Goofs:
Anachronisms: The smoothly-cut logs that feature many times in the early scenes are clearly cut with machinery not available in the early C15th. more
Quotes:
Kirill: Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth and the thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth. Walk in the ways of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes but know that for all these God will bring thee into judgment. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth before the difficult days come and the years draw nigh when thou shalt say "I have no pleasure in them." Remember thy creator before the silver cord be loosed... more
Movie Connections:

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
90 out of 107 people found the following review useful.
What side will you take?, 21 March 2005
10/10
Author: Vadim_ from Russia

Some historical knowledge will definitely not hurt while watching this film.

The medieval society was deeply religious. The church influenced every aspect of people's lives from birth to death and was part of the state. It means religious leaders were as important as rulers.

In Russian society men were wearing beards and women covered hairs. Remove a beard from a man or uncover woman's hair and you will humiliate them, they would feel like modern people being undressed in public.

Paganism is a form of religion, where people believe in many gods instead of one. The main Russian pagan gods are the goddess of the earth and the god of the sun. Among others - the god of storms and lightning, the mythical young women living in forests and rivers. Despite many centuries of suppression of paganism by authorities some in modern Russia still celebrate the feast of Ivan Kupala (which could be translated as Ivan Gathering) depicted in the movie.

Also I have to mention, that Soviet censors told Tarkovski the movie is too cruel. They told him the scene with a burning cow, for example, is absolutely unacceptable. Tarkovski tried to defend the movie. The cow wasn't harmed, was his reasoning. Still the film was cut. The censors knew better what is good and what is not for the viewer.

This brings us to what is the message of Tarkovski in this film. There are many messages actually. I'll be telling only about one here, because it is not hidden. It is there, in the dispute between Rublov and Theophanes The Greek. They both are talented, both want to bring people to humanity. Theophanes is tired, he says - common people live in darkness, they are completely consumed by sin and the only way to make them humans is to scare them and punish them. Rublov advocates for love. He says: people live very difficult life, it's amazing how they endure it. We have to love them, to remind them, they are humans, they are Russians. You see, the first is the position of the Soviet system, the second - of Jesus Christ.

Me? I'm still sitting on the fence. :)

I recommend to watch this movie many times. You will do it without my recommendation though, if you (like me) will not understand everything from the first view and you like to think. The mesmerizing beauty of this movie will help you to return easier. For the first time be prepared for not a cakewalk. There are two things to consider here. One is the cruelty. Though it is absolutely necessary in this film, most of us living in a comfort of modern society are not ready to it. The other is the pace. Often it is a pace of real life.

Peace.

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Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Andrey Rublyov (1966)
Recent Posts (updated daily)User
What Tarkovsky Film should I watch first (Mirror,Andrev Rublev, Solaris) odysseydave
An atheists point of view Maxede
Give me the strength to finish (spoiler?) whatareyoudoig
Lack of music narf760
Why is this film in B/W? tompardi
Subtitling error in 205 min version? (spoiler?) rublevy
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