Alexander Popov (film)
Alexander Popov | |
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Directed by | Herbert Rappaport |
Written by | |
Starring | Nikolai Cherkasov Yefim Kopelyan Aleksandr Borisov Bruno Freindlich Yury Tolubeyev Osip Abdulov |
Cinematography | |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Alexander Popov (Russian: Александр Попов) is a 1949 biographical film directed by Herbert Rappaport about the life and work of Alexander Stepanovich Popov, who was the notable physicist and electrical engineer, and early developer of radio communication.
Synopsis[]
In the process of scientific search the talent and the power of observation of Popov allowed him to complete a number of unique discoveries. The wireless telegraph invented by him was used for the first time in the heaviest conditions of the polar north, for rescuing people, which proved to be themselves on the ice floe in the open ocean...
Role as propaganda film[]
Along with Grigori Roshal's Ivan Pavlov, which came out that same year, Alexander Popov was among the first in a series of patriotic biographical films produces in the Soviet Union which aimed to prove the superiority of Russian and Soviet science and art over that of the West.[1]
The films acknowledges the Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi, but makes not mention of Nikola Tesla, whose work paved the way for Popov's inventions. This obscuring of American achievements is in line with other Russian Cold War-era films.[2]
Cast[]
- Nikolay Cherkasov as Aleksandr Stepanovich Popov
- Aleksandr Borisov as Rybkin
- as Admiral Makarov
- as Mendeleyev
- as Petrushevsky
- Vladimir Chestnokov as Lyuboslavsky
- as Raisa Alekseevna
- as Tyrtov
- as Marconi
- Osip Abdulov as Isaacs
Awards[]
In 1951 for this film both directors, both operators and main actors (Cherkasov, Skorobogatov, Freindlich, Borisov) received the Stalin Prize of 2nd degree.[3]
References[]
- ^ Liehm, Mira; Liehm, Antonín J. (1977). The Most Important Art: Soviet and Eastern European Film After 1945. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-520-04128-8.
- ^ Kozovoi, Andrei (2014). "The Cold War and Film". In Kalinovsky, Artemy M.; Daigle, Craig (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of the Cold War. London and New York: Routledge. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-134-70065-3.
- ^ Alexander Popov at kino-teatr.ru
External links[]
- Alexander Popov at IMDb
- Alexander Popov at AllMovie
- Film Alexander Popov watchable and downloadable with Esperanto subtitles
- 1949 films
- Russian-language films
- 1940s biographical drama films
- Soviet biographical drama films
- Russian biographical drama films
- Soviet films
- Lenfilm films
- Films directed by Herbert Rappaport
- Soviet black-and-white films
- Cultural depictions of Guglielmo Marconi
- 1949 drama films
- Biographical film stubs
- 1940s Soviet film stubs
- Films about radio
- Biographical films about scientists
- Films set in the Arctic