Russia/Silent/Black & White
Director: Vladimir Romashkov
Writer: Vasiliy Goncharov
Producer: Aleksandr Drankov
Production Co: A. Drankov Studio
Cinematography: Aleksandr Drankov, Nikolai Kozlovskiy
Cast: Yevgeny Petrov-Kraevskiy
Stenka Razin is the leader of a group of outlaws who live a life of revelry and carousing along the Volga River and in the nearby forests. When Razin becomes distracted by a captured foreign princess and starts to dote on her, his men are displeased, feeling that he is neglecting them and their usual activities. Soon they come up with a plot, in the hopes of turning Razin against the princess.
Stenka Razin (1908) - has the distinction of being the first Russian dramatic silent film production — a tribute to the determination of its producer, Aleksandr Drankov. When his first 17 films failed to win serious attention in early 1908, he answered the widespread call for Russian-made films with Stenka Razin. This account of the popular brigand leader who dallied with a captured Persian princess was adapted from a traditional ballad From the Island to the Deep Stream and Drankov commissioned original music to accompany his film from no less than Ippolitov-lvanov, then head of the Moscow Conservatoire. Energetic promotion ensured the film's commercial success and launched Drankov's career as a producer.
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