One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich [VHS]
|
| Price: |
8 new or used available from $36.99
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #803 in VHS
- Released on: 1988-07-05
- Rating: G (General Audience)
- Formats: Color, Full Screen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of tapes: 1
- Running time: 105 minutes
Customer Reviews
Solzhenitsyn's grim gulag existence
Tom Courtenay stars as the title character in the bleak, colorless and nightmarish recreation of the Russian gulag penal system in "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovish". Based on the novel by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, this joint British and Norwegian production filmed in the remote and bleak northernmost province of Norway, depicts one typical day of a 10 year prison sentence.
In the desolate and freezing Siberian tundra the unfortunate Ivan Denisovich exhibits a desperate will to survive. Working under horrendous conditions under scrutiny from guards and prisoners as well, Courtenay and his work group must fulfill their work quota under the threat of starvation. He manages to muster small favors from his fellow prisoners throughout the day which earns him extra food, tobacco and privileges.
Having survived the day all he can look forward to is another one frought with similar perils as he attempts to outlive the remainder of his sentence.
DVDPLZ
Release/Remaster in DVD format PLEASE.
Cinema is history and should not be at risk of loss.
Our culture(s) and forms will eventually be the
archeological fodder of future inquiry.
Our era has important messages.
Let us not be lost.
Thank you.
Solzhenitsyn's autobiography in cinema
The first and, thus far, only book from Nobel prize winner Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to reach the American film market, "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch" is a depiction of a day in the gulag -- the Soviet string of forced labor camps the government sent its citizens to in the Stalin era from the 1920s through Stalin's death in 1953.
Solzhenitsyn wrote the book after his first encampment in a labor camp, having been arrested for crimes that didn't exist. Aside from the other content comments, the thing I would add that is most telling is Ivan Denisovitch has a good day this day because, during meal time, he finds in his fish soup the fish's eye. While abhorrent to the rest of us, this made for a splendid day in the gulag.
Tom Courtenay was perhaps not the best choice to play the lead but it would hardly have mattered what actors were selected. If you have read the book, Solzhenitsyn's first and most accessible, you know it's part of his lifelong expose of what he detailed more finely in "The Gulag Archipelago."
This is the simplest and easiest introduction to the harrowing world Solzhenitsyn lived in, wrote about, and whose books floated around the Soviet Union for years, chapters at a time, being passed from person to person. Here, you get to ingest the whole thing visually.
Anyone else having an interest in Russia or 20th century European history would benefit from giving this film a look.
![One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/219ABN4GN7L._SL210_.jpg)



