Bulat-Batır or Bulat-batyr (Russian: Була́т-Баты́р, Tatar: بولات باتر) is a 1928 silent historical drama film, believed to be the first Tatar film and probably the only Tatar full-length feature silent film. The film was shot mostly in Kazan, and the Kazan Kremlin was one of its stills. The film is devoted to the Pugachev rebellion and its alternative names include Pugachyovshchina (Russian: Пугачёвщина), Flames on Volga and Revolt in Kazan.[1]

Bulat-Batır
Directed byYuri Tarich
Vladimir Korsh-Sablin
Written byNatan Zarhi
Abdraxman Şakirov
StarringVasiliy Yaroslavtsev
Ada Vojtsik
Ivan Klyukvin
Galina Kravchenko
CinematographyGrigori Giber, N. Sokolov, Vladimir Solodnikov (II)
Distributed bySovkino
Tatkino
Release date
  • 1928 (1928)
CountrySoviet Union
Languages- = Silent film
Russian intertitles
Tatar intertitles

The story was written by Abdraxman Şakirov, a young Communist from Agryz and the script was written by Natan Zarhi, a Soviet scenario writer.

Plot

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In the 18th century, a small Tatar village celebrates the Sabantuy festival. Orthodox monks, accompanied by soldiers, arrive with the intent to forcibly baptize the local Muslim population. The villagers resist, but the soldiers carry out a punitive action, killing the wife of the peasant Bulat and kidnapping his son Asfan. Bulat is left alone with his other son, Timur, and his adopted daughter, Asma.

Fifteen years later, Bulat becomes a well-known figure in the Pugachev Rebellion, gaining fame as a defender of the poor. With the help of his son Timur and adopted daughter Asma, Bulat fights alongside the rebels. Meanwhile, Asfan, who was raised among nobles and educated in the elite, receives a commission as an officer. He is given command of a punitive force tasked with suppressing the uprising in his native village of Chibilne, where his father and brother are part of the rebellion.

The events unfold in the Kazan province. Chibilne is likely a fictional village, as there was no village by that name in the Kazan province.

Cast

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Critical reception

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It is known that after the premiere in Germany one White émigré Antonov-Ivanov attempted to burn a copy of the film in the "Concordia" cinema as a sign of protest against "Bolshevik Propaganda".[2]

The film received a positive review from The New York Times praising it for the authentic atmosphere.[3] Bryher praised the scenery and the cinematography.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Bryher (1922). Film Problems Of Soviet Russia. Riant Chateau TERRITET Switzerland. pp. 109–111.
  2. ^ "Beginning of December. Berlin". No. 50. Kino. 11 December 1928. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016. Retrieved 13 June 2021. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  3. ^ "TARTARS' REVOLT SHOWN.; "Flames on Volga" a Vivid Picture of Catherine the Great's Days". The New York Times.
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