- Source: The Battle of Kerzhenets
The Battle of Kerzhenets (Russian: Се́ча при Ке́рженце; tr.: Secha pri Kerzhentse) is a 1971 Soviet animated film directed by Ivan Ivanov-Vano and Yuri Norstein. The film is set to music by Rimsky-Korsakov and uses Russian frescoes and paintings from the 14th–16th centuries. These are animated using 2-dimensional stop motion animation.
Plot
The story is based on the legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh (made into a 4-act opera by Rimsky-Korsakov in 1907), which disappears under the waters of a lake to escape an attack by the Mongols. (Russia was under the Mongol-Tartar yoke for a period of three centuries in the Middle Ages.)
The film itself follows the legend only loosely, however, and its highpoint is a battle between the Russian soldiers and the Mongol hordes, symbolizing a clash of cultures (the Virgin Mary appears early in the film, in effect watching over the Russian side of the battle).
Awards
1971—Karlovy Vary International Film Festival: Prize for Best Animated Film
1972—Zagreb World Festival of Animated Films: Grand Prize
1972—Tbilisi: Prize for Best Animated Film
1972—Bombay Film Festival: "Diplom"
Creators
See also
History of Russian animation
List of stop-motion films
External links
The Battle of Kerzhenets at IMDb
The Battle of Kerzhenets at the Animator.ru (English and Russian)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- The Battle of Kerzhenets
- Ivan Ivanov-Vano
- Yuri Norstein
- Bogatyr
- Francheska Yarbusova
- History of animation
- List of films: B
- History of Russian animation
- 1900 in animation
- List of Soviet films of 1971