- Source: The Last Port
The Last Port (Russian: Последнии порта; Ukrainian: Oстанні порти) is a monophonic black-and-white film written and directed by filmmaker Arnold Kordyum (1890–1969) after Alexander Korneychuk's 1933 play The Death of the Squadron (Gibel eskadry). Produced by Ukrainfilm in 1934 to be released on 19 January 1935, it starred Pyotr Masokha (1904–1991), Sergei Minin (1901–1937) and Ladislav Golichenko, with film score by Viktor Kosenko.
Plot summary
On the struggle of the communist sailors with the White Guards and the German occupiers in the Crimea during the civil war.
Cast
Sergei Minin as Commissioner of the Black Sea Fleet
Pavel Kiyansky as Naval officer
Pyotr Masokha as Envoy of the Baltic Fleet
N. Bukaev as Sailor with a bandage
Arnold Kordyum as Sailor with accordion
Luka Lyashenko as Sailor from Priluk
I. Marx as Old worker
Lydia Ostrovskaya-Kurdyum as Working woman
Dmitri Erdman as Lieutenant
Pavel Petrik as German officer (as P. Petrik)
A. Doroshkevich as Petliurist
Mikhail Gornatko as Interventionist commissioner
Stepan Shagaida as Admiral
L. Golichenko as Sterna — boatswain
Mikhail Gayvoronsky as Aleksandr Zapolsky
Boris Karlash-Verbitsky as Sailor
A. Kerner
References
External links
The Last Port at IMDb
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