The White Poodle

The White Poodle
Directed by Marianna Roshal and Vladimir Shredel
Written by Georgiy Grebner
Based on The White Poodle
Aleksandr Kuprin
Starring Viktor Koltsov
Vladimir Polyakov
Natalya Gitserot
Aleksandr Antonov
Anatoly Fradis
Music by Aleksei Muravlyov
Cinematography Andrei Boltyansky
Production
company
Release date
  • 1956 (1956)
Running time
70 minutes
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

The White Poodle (Russian: Белый пудель, translit. Belyy pudel) is a 1956 Soviet film directed by Marianna Roshal and Vladimir Shredel. The screenplay was adapted by Grigorii Grebnev from the Aleksandr Kuprin story of the same name. The main roles were played by Viktor Koltsov and Vladimir Polyakov, with others taken by Natalie Gitserot, Alexander Antonov and Georgy Millyar. Filmed in 1955, it was released in October 1956.

Plot

On the Crimean coast at the end of the 19th century, the old organ-grinder Lodyzhkin, his 12-year-old acrobat son Seryozha and their clever white poodle Arto put on shows for the locals and holidaymakers. They earn a modest living and despite the long walks the boy finds the strength to sing as they travel around. One day, in Yalta, they enter the garden of a luxurious house and put on a show before its owners and Trilly, a child nobody says no to. As they are about to leave, Trilly demands the poodle at any price and, despite his family's attempts to explain that the poodle is not for sale as he is central to their act, Trilly won't back down and a crisis ensues. His mother offers the organ-grinder a huge sum of money but he refuses and leaves. That night the dog disappears...

Cast

  • Viktor Koltsov as grandfather Lodizhkin
  • Vladimir Polyakov as Serge, acrobat
  • Natalia Gitserot as Ms. Obolyaninova
  • Alexander Antonov as janitor
  • Georgy Millyar as servant Ivan
  • Mikhail Gluzsky as fisherman
  • Simon Svashenko as Hobo
  • Galina Levchenko
  • Valentina Kutsenko as fisherwoman
  • Aleksandr Antonov as yardman

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.