6.6 /10 1 Votes
6.4/10 Written by Pyotr Chardynin Running time 81 minutes Director Pyotr Chardynin Initial DVD release 29 November 2005 (Russia) | 3.4/5 Directed by Pyotr Chardynin Release date 1918 (1918) Initial release 14 May 1918 (Russia) Screenplay Pyotr Chardynin Cinematography Vladimir Siversen | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Starring Vera Kholodnaya
Pyotr Chardynin
Ossip Runitsch
Vitold Polonsky
Vladimir Maksimov Production
company Kharitonov Trading House Cast Vera Kholodnaya, Pyotr Chardynin, Vitold Polonsky, Ossip Runitsch, Vladimir Maksimov Similar Anna Karenina, The King of Paris, Father Sergius, The Queen of Spades, Stenka Razin |
Be silent my sorrow be silent 1918 movie
Be silent, sorrow ... be silent (Russian: Молчи, грусть...молчи, Molchi, grust... molchi, or English: Still, Sadness ... Still) is a 1918 Soviet silent drama film directed by famous director Pyotr Chardynin, and starring several big Russian silent film stars of the era, including Vera Kholodnaya, Ossip Runitsch, Vitold Polonsky and Vladimir Maksimov. This film consisted of two parts, but only the first part (44 minutes in length) survives. The film is most well-known now because of the star-studded cast.
Contents
Plot
Paula is a circus performer married to clown-acrobat Lorio. Lorio drinks heavily, and eventually he is critically injured when he performs drunk. The crippled Lorio and Paula are forced to become street musicians.
A group of wealthy young men who had previously seen Paula at the circus decide to invite the two to perform at their private "bachelor" party, at which Paula is the main attraction. The young men vie for her attention, give her an expensive necklace and offer Lorio money to turn her over to them. Outraged, Paula leaves and refuses to return to the streets to perform. But when they are truly destitute, she returns to offer herself to one of the gentlemen, the artist Volyntsev.
As Lorio sinks deeper into poverty, Paula enjoys her life as a rich man's mistress - for a while. Her lover becomes too possessive for her taste, and eventually tires of her. When Volyntsev attempts to offer her to a younger rival, Telepnev, Paula leaves him for another young man - Zaritskiy, who is deeply in love with her. Zaritskiy is an inveterate gambler, and playing against Telepnev, he has lost a huge sum of money. Desperate, he devises a plot to steal a cheque he gave to Telepnev. While Paula unwittingly serves as decoy, distracting the party by singing for the guests, her lover sets off the alarm as he attempts to break into the safe. Telepnev doesn't recognise Zaritskiy in the dark room, and shoots him.
Thus concludes the first part. The second part is considered to be lost.