Don Diego and Pelagia

Don Diego and Pelagia
Directed by Yakov Protazanov
Written by Vasili Lokot
Cinematography Yevgeni Alekseyev
Production
company
Release date
24 February 1928
Country Soviet Union
Language Silent
Russian intertitles

Don Diego and Pelagia (Russian: Дон Диего и Пелагея, translit. Don Diego i Pelageya) is a 1928 Soviet silent comedy drama directed by Yakov Protazanov.[1][2]

The film's art direction was by Sergei Kozlovsky.

Plot

Head of a small railway station Yakov Ivanovich Golovach is obsessed with reading historical novels about knights. Fancying himself as the hero of one book – Don Diego, he loves to fight with an imaginary opponent. He is caught in the act by the female residents of the surrounding villages who came to the station of the arriving mail train in order to sell their simple culinary creations

Laughter of the peasant women drives Yakov Ivanovich furious. In a rage he orders to detain violators of the railway rules who are crossing the railway line. But he only manages to catch the dawdling old woman Pelageya Diomina ...

Cast

  • Mariya Blyumental-Tamarina as Pelageya Diomina
  • Anatoliy Bykov as 'Don Diego', station master
  • Vladimir Mikhaylov as Pelageya's husband
  • I. Levkoyeva as Natasha, member Komsomol
  • Ivan Yudin as Misha, cell secretary Komsomol
  • Vladimir Popov as Miroshka, guard Volispolkom
  • Daniil Vvedenskiy as Night watcher
  • Aleksandr Gromov as Uchraspred
  • Mikhail Zharov as Himself
  • B. Gusiev as Militia man
  • Yelena Tyapkina as Pope's Wife
  • Ivan Pelttser as Burocrat
  • Sergei Tsenin as Burocrat
  • Osip Brik as Burocrat
  • Nikolay Ivakin as Cooperative Shop Employee
  • Lev Fenin as Postman's Guest
  • Vera Maretskaya as Girl in trial
  • Sofya Levitina as Woman in Jail
  • Andrei Gorchilin
  • Chuveliov

References

  1. Christie & Taylor p.428
  2. Jay Leyda (1960). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. p. 240.

Bibliography

  • Christie, Ian & Taylor, Richard. The Film Factory: Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents 1896-1939. Routledge, 2012.


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