Golden Mountains (film)

1931 film

  • 6 November 1931 (1931-11-06)
Running time
3,585 meters (95 minutes)CountrySoviet UnionLanguagesSilent film
Russian intertitles

Golden Mountains (Russian: Златые горы, romanized: Zlatye gory) is a 1931 Soviet silent drama film directed by Sergei Yutkevich. A re-edited sound version of the film was released in 1936.[1][2]

Plot

The film is set in the year 1914. Having received a large military order, the administration of the St. Petersburg metallurgical plant "Krutilov and Son" is attracting new workers. However, a strike is looming at the plant under the influence of a powerful strike movement of the Baku oil workers.

An engineer, who is the son of the factory owner, tries to bribe the former farmer Pyotr and make him the leader of the newly arrived workers. Pyotr takes part in the assassination of the Bolshevik activist-worker Vasili. As a result, the hero is forced to bring home the wounded Bolshevik. Once in the environment of striking workers, Pyotr enters into their ranks and engages in class struggle.

Cast

  • Boris Poslavsky - Pyotr, the country boy
  • Yuri Korvin-Krukovsky - Industrialist Krutilov
  • Boris Fedosyev - Krutilov's son
  • Ivan Shtraukh - Vasili, Bolshevik organizer
  • Boris Tenin - Windy
  • Nikolai Michurin -Nikolai (foreman)
  • Natalya Razumova -The Girl
  • Konstantin Nazarenko
  • Nikoloz Shengelaya -Man from Baku oil fields
  • Fyodor Slavsky
  • Leonid Kmit
  • Stepan Kayukov
  • Boris Chirkov

References

  1. ^ Golden Mountains (1931) | MUBI, retrieved 26 November 2023
  2. ^ "Film "Golden Mountains" Overview - SHOSTAKOVI.CH - The Page of Shostakovich". shostakovi.ch. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  • Golden Mountains at IMDb
  • v
  • t
  • e
Films by Sergei Yutkevich
  • v
  • t
  • e
Operas and operettas
Ballets
Symphonies
  • No. 1 in F minor
  • No. 2 in B major (To October)
  • No. 3 in E major (The First of May)
  • No. 4 in C minor
  • No. 5 in D minor
  • No. 6 in B minor
  • No. 7 in C major (Leningrad)
  • No. 8 in C minor
  • No. 9 in E major
  • No. 10 in E minor
  • No. 11 in G minor (The Year 1905)
  • No. 12 in D minor (The Year 1917)
  • No. 13 in B minor (Babi Yar)
  • No. 14 in G minor
  • No. 15 in A major
Concertos
Piano
  • No. 1 in C minor
  • No. 2 in F major
Violin
  • No. 1 in A minor
  • No. 2 in C minor
Cello
  • No. 1 in E major
  • No. 2 in G major
Orchestral works
Concert/brass band
Film music
Vocal music
Chamber music
String
quartets
  • No. 1 in C major
  • No. 2 in A major
  • No. 3 in F major
  • No. 4 in D major
  • No. 5 in B major
  • No. 6 in G major
  • No. 7 in F minor
  • No. 8 in C minor
  • No. 9 in E major
  • No. 10 in A major
  • No. 11 in F minor
  • No. 12 in D major
  • No. 13 in B minor
  • No. 14 in F major
  • No. 15 in E minor
  • No. 16 in B major (unrealized)
Other
  • Cello Sonata in D minor
  • Piano Quintet in G minor
  • Piano Trio No. 1 in C minor
  • Piano Trio No. 2 in E minor
  • Quartet Movement in E major (c. 1960s)
  • Violin Sonata
  • Viola Sonata
Piano music
Family
Named for Shostakovich
Related articles
Category

References


Stub icon

This article related to a Soviet film of the 1930s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e