Rasputin (1981) Poster

(1981)

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7/10
An intriguing film
JuguAbraham30 June 2008
Many may not be aware that this film was considered "worthless" in the Soviet Union after it was made and shelved for years. Director Elem Klimov made several changes to the 1975 original version and it was ultimately released in 1981 and shown at the Venice Film Festival 1982 (where it won the FIPRESCI prize) out of competition.

The original name of the film was Agony (Agoniya) and not Rasputin, a name by which the film was marketed for a while. The title Agony was evidently in line with what the director had in mind. If we were to accept that argument, was the director's original film about the spiritual agony of the controversial holy man? Or was it meant to reflect the agony of Czar Nicholas, who could not go against the Czarina's total faith in Rasputin? Was the title meant to depict the agony of a great nation afflicted by the abysmal corruption among the monarchists who were there to make money while the poor starved and the indecisive Czar painted flowers to distract himself from the more pressing political problems (One fine sequence in the film soon after the Duma castigates the Czar shows the silent but mentally tortured Czar, with tear filled eyes looking for comfort in the sympathetic gaze of his loyal butler). Was the title also to depict the agony of the Russian Orthodox Church which was suddenly losing its grip on the worshippers with the rise of the Bolsheviks and "holy men" like Rasputin? We will never know unless we see the original version the director made. My guess is the director wanted to combine all these agonies and that Rasputin, the individual, dominated only a segment of the agonizing events. What we do know is that this film and its many versions that were put out by Soviet and the post-Perestroika Russian authorities were at no point of time expected to depict Rasputin as the sole villain that led to the to the 1916 October Revolution.

The film does offer several insights into the enigmatic character of Rasputin. He did indeed accept bribes from those wanting favors from the Czar, while the film distinctly indicates that it is debatable that he loved money and wealth. He was least concerned about getting rich, because he could get what he desired without pelf. Rasputin had an ability to foresee the future but could totally misread his dreams (The film includes an interesting sequence where he rolls in a pool of stagnant water, as he can foresee his fall from grace at the Czar's palace). He could perform small miracles, could utter saintly statements ("the cowl does not make a monk") and believed like a village bumpkin that you could sin and then start life with a clean slate! No wonder the Russian Orthodox Church saw in him an evil rascal. What happens to him after the Church traps him is totally unclear in the version of the film I saw. Was he castrated? Klimov's Rasputin is unusual--he is an animal waiting to ravish a beautiful woman one moment, and then a religious zealot throwing out the woman for having tried to seduce him the very next moment.

I am convinced that Klimov's film is less about Rasputin than about the people that surrounded him. Take the Czar, for one.

Klimov's cinematic essay shows him scurrying away from a meeting on war preparations in dark passageways behind wall-maps worried equally about his haemophiliac son Alexei, the crown prince who is depicted as a brat. The personal worries of the Czar (in the photography dark room, in his relationship with the Orthodox Church, his empathies for his worried wife doting on her children) have been given importance, unlike Franklin Schaffner's Nicholas and Alexandra that seemed to focus on the Czarina (Janet Suzman) more than the Czar. Interestingly, Klimov's film downplays the Czarina's role focusing more on the Czar.

Klimov's range of agonies does not end here. Even the assassins of Rasputin are agonizingly guilt-ridden. Most Russians are Church-going Orthodox Christians and Klimov understood his audience quite well. The dubious role of the Orthodox Church in those troubled times are pitch forked into prominence—the film shows the burial of Rasputin officiated by the Church in the presence of the Czar.

Finally, Klimov spliced documentary footage to show the agonies of the common man at every given interval to add validity to his essay on the varied agonies he captures on celluloid.

While Klimov's film shows patches of brilliance, one needs to recall that he initially made his mark as filmmaker decades before Agoniya having made remarkable satirical comedies like Adventures of a dentist. (I have yet to see the latter film; however, what both films have in common is that wonderful Russian actress Alisa Frejnlikh, who played the Stalker's wife in Tarkovsky's Stalker.) His last few films Agoniya and Idi o simotri (Go and see/Come and see) proved that he was now looking at life grimly. He was then working closely with his wife, actor and director Larisa Shepitko and was reported to be a devoted husband. Equally enigmatic is the role of Lady Vyrubova played by Alisa Frejnlikh. What was the relationship between Rasputin and Vyrubova? Probably the answers lie in the director's cut of Agoniya, which is possibly lost for ever.

I was privileged to have met Klimov at Hyderabad, India, in 1986 during a Film Festival. It was after his wife's death. I recall that he was withdrawn and less than forthcoming to questions. Was he afraid to talk? Was he a genius who was never allowed to prove it, because of political pressures? This is probably why both Agoniya and Klimov remain enigmatic for me to this day.
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7/10
Another sensationalist movie about Rasputin.
Grishka4 July 2007
What an awful movie. Rasputin is portrayed as a completely insane person. We get no insight at all into his personality. This is just another movie in a row of sensationalist movies about Rasputin. The only movie who takes Rasputin seriously is "Rasputin" made in 1996 starring Alan Rickman, Ian McKellen, David Warner and others. It's so tiring to watch yet another Rasputin movie about a crazy evil monster creating havoc. Always we get "The mad monk" angle. Rasputin was never a member of any monk order and therefore never defrocked, but who cares about details like that. There was a real religious side to Rasputin and there was a darker side, but the books and movies only focus on the latter because that's where there's money to be made. I wonder when we're going to see a historically accurate movie about Rasputin. Perhaps never, I fear...
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7/10
Long duration of no matter if historically correct as worth it alone for lead actor's tour de force manic portrayal
Bofsensai6 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Whew! Wanting to add this into my reviews collection as just so - well: just what precisely? Just worth seeing!

Rather than comment on the historical accuracy, or not, of this, I would only wish to recommend it for director Klimov's interesting presentation and take on the whole matter, not least to see lead actor Alexei Petrenko's quite 'committed' portrayal of Rasputin, i.e. its Westernised = easier to comprehend, title, but also because of Klimov's conceit to have interspersed and juxtaposed it throughout with early - presumably rare? - genuine (I believe, it seems) contemporary black and white archive film footage. To which then renders the Mosfilm colour palette, a then even more quite striking contrast, too.

Version seen ran c.145 minutes (split in two - 'Russian Cinema Council' version - of note, apparently 'forbidden' to be exhibited in any of the former Soviet states according to the standard introductory warning inserts!), so longer than that indicated here on IMDB, yet seemingly still shorter than that listed in its Wikipedia entry (at supposedly another ten minutes longer), but over which length, surprisingly, was still so engrossing that I didn't get that usual feel of such long film duration storytelling drag at all: and incidentally, so perhaps it was also in that latter (longer timed) version is all the alleged notorious sex and licentiousness, that apparently got it stymied for release in the then Soviet Union, because I couldn't discern any here beyond a blink and you'll miss it full frontal flash (in black and white ..) and latterly rear end shot of turfed out of bed Tsarina ...(perhaps?)

What does come across -so, surprisingly to have been suppressed in the era it was made in - is the undertone of pure contempt the ruling establishment elite have for the abject conditions and poverty that affect the Tsar's subjects: one scene right at the beginning of part two, with a clearly portrayed rich guy stiffing a carriage driver out of just "one kopek" goes on long enough to make you feel it was put in and focused on for more than just story pacing. (Although one scene with the battle commanders questioning the Tsar Nicholas' following of Rasputin's insistence to divert the ongoing battles to an area where tens of soldiers would meet inevitable death, does show at least some of those commanders questioning that .. no idea if historically accurate, but perhaps that was not the point ..?)

Then, although this film is concerned with just Rasputin's (supposed) death, quite oddly, interestingly this 'authorised' 'Russian Cinema Council' issue home screener dvd copy came with an extra that showed the far more recent newsreel footage of Boris Yeltsin dedicating the now exhumed remains of the Tsar's family (in c. 1998) to be interred (into the St. Peter and Paul Cathedral in St Petersburg) with him now castigating ("monstrous crime") how they were murdered and exculpating their culpability. (Then, since being a newsreel short, it is fair to say doesn't rightly belong here, but still to add on this: further odd note is that The Russian Orthodox church Patriarch disputed those found bones' authenticity, though!)

Side by side, real weird.

Fabulous visual pleasure and an acting tour de force verging on manic (beserker!*) from lead role Petrenko (*just wait for the village picnic scene!)
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10/10
Power in the Eyes of the Beast
osloj30 July 2001
Warning: Spoilers
This film is so odd and bizarre that I was totally immersed in it. In actuality, this is a basic story that deals with Siberian peasant 'Rasputin', the mystic whose ability to improve the condition of Aleksey Nikolayevich, the hemophiliac heir to the Russian throne, made him an influential favorite at the court of Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra.

The actor who plays Rasputin is an evil duplicate, a man who is oozing virulence, and he also has a very charismatic smile that almost looks diabolical. He's a strange character, and has a vastly powerful influence on the Czar's family and Russian political life.

As the viewer, we are left to wonder, 'what do these people see in him, how does he control them so?'.

He soon makes enemies of the church, the state, and the local husbands, who do not take kindly to his debauchery and licentiousness.

The director is brilliant in weaving a documentary montage of Russian events, and the ending is one of the most powerful ever envisioned by a director.

Director Elem Klimov also directed Come and See (1985), another supreme movie.

I was especially lucky to find a VHS copy in a big city public library, because this is an extremely hard to find title.
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10/10
The Mad Monk RASPUTIN
bazarov2423 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
RASPUTIN did not die easily.

As his assassins stood by impatiently, Rasputin, the Czarina Alexandra's favorite holy man and one of the most hated figures of pre-revolutionary Russia, stuffed himself with cyanide-laced cakes and washed them down with a sweet wine that had been similarly spiked. His only comment was that the wine was rather poor.

The conspirators then shot him repeatedly. He stumbled and fell, but didn't give up his ghost. The murderers bludgeoned him and, at last, when he had lost consciousness, they dropped the body into the frozen Neva River. Later, an autopsy revealed that Rasputin's lungs were full of water. He'd simply drowned. That was in December 1916 in St. Petersburg.

Rasputin still isn't dead as far as movie makers are concerned. He has been played by Conrad Veidt (1930), Lionel Barrymore (1932), Harry Baur (1938), Edmond Purdom (1960), Christopher Lee (1966), Gert Frobe (1968) and, most recently, by Tom Baker in the 1971 spectacle ''Nicholas and Alexandra.'' Here he is the subject of a curious Russian film, ''Rasputin''.

I use the word ''new'' loosely. ''Rasputin'' (originally titled ''Agoniya'') was made many years ago but was withheld from release in the Soviet Union, when it was cleared in what some perceived as a liberalization under by Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the new Soviet leader. It is easy to understand why the Russians might have had uneasy thoughts about the film, directed by Elem Klimov and with Alexei Petrenko in the title role.

In spite of a prologue of newsreel clips accompanied by voice-over narration, which tries to put the story of the ''mad monk'' into proper context, this film might make one believe that the Grigori Rasputin was the major cause of the 1917 revolution, rather than a symptom of the corruption that made revolution inevitable. Except for the newsreel footage, and a sequence showing Rasputin visiting his peasant family in Siberia, the movie is almost exclusively concerned with showing us low-life among the aristocratic St. Petersburg swells and their hangers-on, including Rasputin.

In this, ''Rasputin'' is comparatively adventurous, even risky, for a Russian film. It also gives us an almost sympathetic picture of Czar Nicholas, presented as a befuddled, weak but essentially decent man, dependent on his superstitious wife. She, in turn, is seen as being bewitched by Rasputin, whom she believes to be her conduit to God, as well as the only person capable of treating her hemophiliac son.

''Rasputin'' is less a coherently dramatized history than a series of sometimes vivid tableaux vivants. At the center is the remarkable figure of Mr. Petrenko's Rasputin, a huge, heedless, messy, out-of-control zealot, given to epic debauches, severe depressions and mystical revelations. He's a man who finds himself with more power than he knows what to do with and with no real plans to put into effect. He's an opportunist who may well believe in his own powers.

Never, however, does the film make any effort to analyze him or to suggest that, given the temper of the times, the emergence of such a man was a foregone conclusion. At times, this ''Rasputin'' suggests nothing much more than a horror film, a somewhat politicized ''Exorcist.''

Mr. Klimov, the director, employs a sort of impressionistic cinema style, cutting back and forth between color footage and monochrome, between fictional scenes and newsreels and, in one of the film's most successful sequences (near the end), between a series of still photographs, some from the archives and some shot for the film.

It is not always easy to follow the story, even if one has boned up on the accepted facts before seeing the film, but Mr. Klimov keeps the focus fairly narrow and short. With the exception of Rasputin, the historical figures are scarcely characterized, though Anatoly Romashin looks right as Czar Nicholas. Velta Linne, who plays the Czarina, looks more like a worried Russian peasant woman than the German princess who never felt at home in Mother Russia.

Though it's a footnote to history, the life and death of Rasputin retains its fascination. Mr. Klimov does particular justice to the murder plot that ended Rasputin's life. As he stages it, to the sounds of ''Dixie'' on an old-fashioned Victrola, the assassination turns into a macabre slapstick comedy, one in which the victim keeps coming back to life to scare the wits out of the faint-hearted, desperate, high-born perpetrators.
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Historic events turned into great cinematic work
b_larson20 June 2002
I don't understand russian language and I'm not very familiar to russian history, but the events told in this film make a very strong and exciting experience. Much of this is due to Elem Klimovs very conscious use of cinematic methods. The mad monk (Rasputin) as an evil force in russian politics is portrayed with great force. Klimov seems to be one of the great cinematic poets and dramatist who can tell a story of violent and dramatic political events, and also of private and psychological conditions. The actors are first rate in every aspect and make this cruel story a memorable, thrilling and moving experience. Agoniya means of course agony, and that is what the imperial family and the political elite in Russia went trough these years. Klimov had to do some compromises, but this film is in any way a masterpiece.
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5/10
Has its strengths, but Klimov admitted it was not successful for a reason
jjshepherd-8654212 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In one interview, director Elem Klimov considered his last film, "Come and See" to be his best film, but "Agonyia," or "Rasputin," is his second most well-known film, yet he succeeded only partially. Regarding the depiction of the final days of Imperial Russia, this film is a very fine work, but its other aspects are rather mediocre.

Regarding the depiction of Rasputin himself, it is okay, but it doesn't create much emotional response to the man, positive or negative. The depiction does not given any insights into the man himself beyond what you could learn from reading his Wikipedia page. The movie was, also too long for its own good, and could've easily been 20 minutes shorter, telling concisely what took place leading up to and at Raputin's violent death.

Where this really movie shines, is how it mixes the film's scenes with historical footage of that time, which Klimov similarly did with "Come and See".

Overall, don't expect this to be anything close to the quality of Klimov's final film, as it is deeply, deeply inferior, but if you've seen Klimov's other films and just want to see all of them, then this may be worth the watch.
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5/10
Better than American take on it, but still sucks
grendel-2822 June 1999
I must say that for me no other director is even getting close to the level of annoyance of Mr. Klimov. I like Petrenko and the is guy really trying to get this stuff off the ground but even such heavyweight as him can't pull this off. Rent it if you have seen the other one - for the full measure but Elem bores the hell out of me with his predictability.
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Okay, I'm not really Russian...
JohnnyCNote3 March 1999
...but I speak the language fluently. Even so, I need the subtitles to get through this one. Petrenko is VERY convincing as the mad monk.

The plot is every bit as convoluted and murky as was Russian society in those days.

It's a great film, one of my favorites from Russia/USSR...
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about Russia
Kirpianuscus28 July 2017
a special film. at first sigh, about a man who was in many others movies used as exotic character. in this case , he represents only the pretext. for a story about a profound crisis, for the chronicle of the fall premises of a monarchy. in same measure, it is a manifesto. the reaction of Soviet authorities about it is the basic argument. because the realities presented by Elem Klimov are against the entire portrait of Tsarist regime presented by official sources. and Rasputin himself is not exactly the expected one. but the film is, in same measure, less than a tool of political opposition. it is an analysis of Russia. the Russia from yesterday and today. the Russia of illusions and leaders and incertitude, hope and faith. and this facts does it a special film. because the fragments of documentary film reminds the powerful shadows behind the artistic purposes.
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