The Left-Hander (1987 film)
The Left-Hander | |
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Directed by | Sergei Ovcharov |
Based on | The Left-Hander by Nikolai Leskov |
Starring | Nikolai Stotskii Vladimir Gostyukhin Leonid Kuravlyov Yury Yakovlev Lev Lemke |
Release date |
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Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Left-Hander (Russian: Левша, romanized: Levsha) is a 1987 Soviet comedy drama directed by Sergei Ovcharov, based on The Left-Hander by Nikolai Leskov.[1] The film features Nikolay Stotskiy, Vladimir Gostyukhin, and Leonid Kuravlyov.
Plot
[edit]Emperor Alexander Pavlovich together with his faithful servant, Cossack Ataman Platov, come to London after the war of 1812. The British are trying to persuade the king to come on their side by showing him various inventions, but Platov insists that the Russians are more skillful.
One day the British demonstrate to the Emperor the nymphozoria – an iron flea that can dance.
Alexander leaves and a few months later he dies, leaving the flea to priest Fedota. His brother, Nikolai "Palkovic" tells Platov to look for artisans who will make better handiwork than the English flea. Ataman finds them, but Platov scolds the masters who put a horseshoe on the flea because the flea stops dancing after the procedure, and takes Lefty away with him who made nails for the flea without leaving him any identifying documents.
When the emperor understands everything, he orders to give the best clothing to Lefty and sends him abroad. The Left-Hander sees that the British do not clean guns with crushed bricks and asks to be sent back. But on the way he has drinks with the ship's skipper, and on arrival while inebriated and lacking identification is sent to the Obukhov Hospital for the destitute. There he dies, having said to Dr. Solski, "Tell the Emperor that the English do not clean their guns with brick; they should not clean this way either by us." But the doctor fearing threats of Count Chernyshev does not tell this to the emperor.
Cast
[edit]- Nikolai Stotskii - The Left-Hander / Lefty
- Vladimir Gostyukhin - Ataman Platov
- Leonid Kuravlyov - Emperor Alexander I Pavlovich
- Yury Yakovlev - Emperor Nicholas I "Palkovic"
- Lev Lemke - Minister Kiselvrode
- Alexander Susnin - old blacksmith
- Sergey Parshin - Tula gunsmith
- Nikolai Lavrov - black gentleman
- Nikolai Kryukov - English admiral
- Victor Smirnov - skipper
- Anatoly Slivnik - policeman
- Viktor Bychkov - dandy
- Evgeny Baranov
- Konstantin Vorobyov
- Valery Zakharov
- Arkadiy Koval
- Joseph Krinsky
- Olga Samoshina
- Stanislav Sokolov
- George Teyh - courtier
- Anatoly Khudoleev
- Alfred Shargorodskii
- Aleksandr Estrin
References
[edit]- ^ Peter Rollberg Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema p.282 "As a film actor, Iakovlev made his debut in the supporting part of Chakhotkin in Konstantin Iudin's Behind the Footlights (Na podmostkakh stseny, 1956). When Ivan Pyr'ev cast the virtually ... In the 1980s and 1990s, he lent his star power to a few daring projects of newcomers, most prominently Sergei Ovcharov' s original Nikolai Leskov adaptation The Left-Hander (Levsha, 1986)."
External links
[edit]
- 1987 films
- 1987 comedy-drama films
- Soviet comedy-drama films
- Russian-language comedy-drama films
- Films based on Russian short stories
- Cultural depictions of Nicholas I of Russia
- Films set in London
- Films set in the 19th century
- 1980s Russian-language films
- 1980s Soviet films
- Films based on works by Nikolai Leskov
- 1980s Soviet film stubs