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Reviewed by Fred Blosser ![]() In the late 1950s and early ‘60s, movies about heroes, warriors, myths, and magic enjoyed a certain vogue that began with the success of The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad in 1958 and continued through the rise and subsequent decline of the Italian-made peplum pictures (1959-1965).
One production along the way, Sword and the Dragon, appeared theatrically in 1960. “The Seven Wonders of the Motion Picture World!” the ads trumpeted.
There was even a tie-in comic book title from Dell Comics.
Long difficult to find on home video in its American incarnation, Ilya Muromets received a loving restoration by Russia’s Mosfilm in 2001. For us fans who have fond memories of Sword and the Dragon from long-ago Saturday matinees, a new Russian DVD edition offers a chance to revisit a nostalgic favorite and better appreciate its artistic merits.
Ilya (Boris Andreyev) is first shown as a strapping but helpless farm youth, bound fast by paralysis.
However, taken as a whole, this rough-hewn quality works marvelously well as a style for translating folk literature to the screen. It creates a convincing world in a way that slick Hollywood productions like Willow never have. Thanks to Ptushko’s discerning eye, the sets and visual composition present the appearance of classic children’s book illustrations come to life. The camp of the Tugars, simultaneously barbaric and sumptuous, suggests a setting that Robert E. Howard might have envisioned. Vladimir’s Byzantine palace recalls the expressionistic sets from Fritz Lang’s Die Nibelungen. Wonderful imagination infuses scene after scene. Vladimir’s Russian allies hurry to his defense in long ships that are drawn ashore and then pulled over the ground on wheels. Kalin orders the Tugars to clamber atop each other, forming a human mountain, from which to view the oncoming enemy legions. A giant crossbow bolt launched from a mangonel shatters the living mound.
The DVD from Ruscico, the Russian Cinema Council, is gorgeously produced. Colors are vibrant, and the image is sharp and clear. The picture is restored to its widescreen dimensions of 2:35-1, so that Ptushko’s careful compositions are not marred by cropping as they were in earlier video editions. For English-speaking audiences, the menu offers an English narrative voice-over or a Russian track with English subtitles. I preferred the Russian track with English subtitles; the English voice-over was a bit distracting, and it interfered in places with Igor Morozov’s stately, haunting musical score. Copies can be ordered from www.ruscico.com . The $22 price is eminently reasonable, and mail service provides a reasonably efficient 3-4 week delivery. If you thought that Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy was overcooked and overrated, as I did, then Ilya Muromets may restore your faith in heroic fantasy cinema.
Russian version in the cinema and on television, go to the Sword and Sorcery Cinema and Television Page. |
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