Silvery Dust
Appearance
(Redirected from Silver Powder)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2023) |
Silvery Dust | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pavel Armand Abram Room |
Written by | Aleksandr Filimonov August Jakobson |
Cinematography | Eduard Tisse |
Music by | Mikhail Chulaki |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Silvery Dust (Russian: Серебристая пыль, romanized: Serebristaya pyl) is a 1953 Soviet science fiction drama film directed by Pavel Armand and Abram Room and starring Mikhail Bolduman, Sofiya Pilyavskaya and Valentina Ushakova.[1]
Synopsis
[edit]The film takes place in the United States. Samuel Steal is a scientist with only one life purpose - to become rich. The professor invents a powerful new weapon of mass destruction; a deadly radioactive silver-gray powder. To possess Steal's invention, a struggle between two military-industrial behemoth trusts involving gangsters begins.
Cast
[edit]- Mikhail Bolduman as Samuel Steal
- Sofiya Pilyavskaya as Doris Steal
- Valentina Ushakova as Jen O'Connel
- Nikolai Timofeyev as Allan O'Connel
- Vsevolod Larionov as Harry Steal
- Vladimir Belokurov as Upton Bruce
- Rostislav Plyatt as McKennedy
- Grigori Kirillov as Dr. Kurt Schneider
- Aleksandr Khanov as Charles Armstrong
- Valeriy Lekarev as Gideon Smith
- Gennadi Yudin as Dick Jones
- Zana Zanoni as Mary Robinson
- D. Kolmogorov as Ben Robinson
- Aleksandr Pelevin as Joe Twist
- Lidiya Smirnova as Flossy Beit
- Osip Abdulov as Sheriff Smiles
- Sergei Tsenin
- Nadir Malishevsky
- Aleksandr Shatov
- Vladimir Savelev
- Yuri Chekulayev
- Arkadi Tsinman
- Vladimir Sez
- Isaak Leongarov
- A. Arkadyeva
- N. Nazaren
- Robert Ross
- Konstantin Nemolyayev as Johnny
- Fyodor Odinokov as Sheriff's Assistant
- Leonid Pirogov as Detained Unemployed
- Anna Zarzhitskaya as Deadley's Wife
References
[edit]- ^ Liehm & Liehm p.69
Bibliography
[edit]- Liehm, Mira & Liehm, Antonín J. The Most Important Art: Eastern European Film After 1945. University of California Press, 1977.
External links
[edit]- Silvery Dust at IMDb