Tale of Tsar Saltan
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£30.00
Based
on a famous fairy tale in verse by Alexander Pushkin, THE TALE OF TSAR
SALTAN is one of director Aleksandr Ptushko’s most sublime creations: a
ravishingly beautiful fantasy about love, magic, betrayal and abandoned
family. Driven from the Russian court by her sisters’ scheming, the
young Tsarina (Larisa Golubkina) is thrown into the sea in a cask with
her infant son. Surviving the storm- tossed voyage, the mother and her
now magically-adult son (Oleg Vidov) land on a remote island where he
falls in love with a Swan Princess in human form (Kseniya Ryabinkina),
and longs for reunion with his estranged father, Tsar Saltan (Vladimir
Andreyev). Like his earlier masterpieces SAMPO and ILYA MUROMETS (also
released by Deaf Crocodile), TSAR SALTAN is filled with breathtaking
imagery: carved wooden lions who shed tears; peasants in pagan ritual
masks, dancing in the snow; the treacherous faces of conspirators bathed
in red candle glow like the witches in Macbeth. Ptushko’s
second-to-last feature, TSAR SALTAN has been gorgeously restored by
Mosfilm and Deaf Crocodile for its first-ever Blu-ray release in the
U.S., co-presented with Seagull Films.
| Format | |
| Format | Blu-Ray |
| Film | |
| Year | 1967 |
| Rating | 15 |
| Director | Aleksandr Ptushko |
| Starring | Vladimir Andreyev Larisa Golubkina Oleg Vidov Kseniya Ryabinkina |
| Country | Soviet Union |
| Label | Deaf Crocodile |
| Region / TV Standard | Code A |
| Language | Russian |
| Subtitles | English |
| Running time | 85 mins |
| Aspect ratio | 2.20:1 |
| Case type | Standard with slipcover |
| Extra features | New hour-long video interview with legendary visual effects artist and film historian Robert Skotak (Academy Award-winner, Best Visual Effects for ALIENS and TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY) on Aleksandr Ptushko and the history of Soviet fantastika filmmaking, moderated by Dennis Bartok of Deaf Crocodile Films New commentary track by comics artist (Swamp Thing), film historian, and author Stephen R. Bissette New essay by film historian and professor Peter Rollberg (Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema) |

