|
Alexander Nevsky (1938, Soviet Union)
(aka Aleksandr Nevskiy)
In Sergei Eisenstein's and Dmitri Vasilev's dramatic,
historical (and Russian propagandistic) war film at a time of rampant
foreign invasions - it was Eisenstein's first sound film:
- in the film's opening set in the year 1242 (following
the invasion by the Mongols from the East), oppressive German Teutonic
Knights - with the help of traitors - attacked a weakened Russia
from the West and, in particular, invaded and destroyed the city
of Pskov; the brutality of the German soldiers was illustrated
by the murder of resistant citizens, and the enslavement
of Russian women after their babies were grabbed and thrown into
bonfires; the ritualistic deaths were presided over by the arrogant
Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, a cold-hearted bishop named
Hermann von Balk (Vladimir Yershov) who was a representative of
the Roman Catholic Church
- citizens of Novgorod - the last free and unconquered
Russian city, called upon strong leadership represented by epic
folk hero and warrior-saint Prince Alexander Nevsky (Nikolai Cherkasov)
to help defend the sacred soil of Russia and protect them; Nevsky
- who was already popular after having defeated the Swedes - responded
by forming a rag-tag army of peasants to repel and attack the Germans
- the film was most noted for its gripping, climactic
half-hour long battle scene on the blindingly-white ice at frozen
Lake Chudskoye in 1242 on the boundary between Novgorod and Pskov; the
scene was accompanied by composer Sergei Prokofiev's superb score
added in post-production
- the conflict was between the invading barbaric Teutonic
knights of the Holy Roman Empire (some of whom were on horseback,
, armed with heavy steel weapons and wearing white capes
and huge horned helmets - representing Hitler's fascist forces) and
the patriotic Russian army (in darker uniforms) led by Prince Alexander
Nevsky, wielding spears, hooks and axes
- in the battle's finale known as "The Battle of the
Ice," as the defeated Germans fled, they were swallowed up when
the frozen ice on Lake Chudskoe started to crack and plunged them
into the frigid water
Battle's Finale on the Thin Ice
|
|
|
|
- following his victory, Alexander celebrated by parading
into Pskov with captured German knights (although he pardoned
and freed the foot-soldiers), and the vengeful peasants in a mob
sought revenge against two traitors (by tearing them apart)
- the heroic Nevsky delivered a
closing speech with a threatening reminder against any other future
aggressors: "Go
and tell all in alien lands that Russia (Rus) lives! Let all come
and be our guests. But he who comes to us sword in hand, by the
sword shall perish! On that our Russian land will forever take
its stand! HE WHO COMES TO US SWORD IN HAND BY THE SWORD SHALL
PERISH. ON THAT OUR RUSSIAN LAND WILL FOREVER TAKE ITS STAND"
|
Assembling for Battle at Lake Chudskoye
Nevsky's Concluding Speech
|