Zvenigora

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Звенигора (Zvenigora/Zvenyhora)

Film poster
Directed by Olexandr Dovzhenko
Written by Mike (Mykhailo) Johansen
Yurko Tyutyunnyk
Olexandr Dovzhenko
Starring Semyon Svashenko
Mykola Nademsky
Georgi Astafyev
Les Podorozhnij
Cinematography Boris Zavelev
A. Pankratyev
V. Horytsyn
Distributed by VUFKU-Odessa
Release date(s) 1928 (Soviet Union)
Running time 65 min.
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Zvenigora, or Zvenyhora (Russian and Ukrainian: Звeнигopа) (1928) is a Soviet film by Ukrainian director Olexandr Dovzhenko. Regarded as a silent revolutionary epic, Dovzhenko's initial film in his "Ukraine Trilogy" (along with Arsenal and Earth) is almost religious in its tone, relating a millennium of Ukrainian history through the story of an old man who tells his grandson about a treasure buried in a mountain. Although Dovzhenko referred to Zvenigora as his "party membership card," it is full of Ukrainian myth, lore and superstition. The magical recurrences and parallels used in the storytelling also invites comparisons to Nikolai Gogol.