Stalin
- Year:
- 1992
- 172 min
- 564 Views
bSiberia, 1917/b
My father had been an exile to Siberia
for life.
But history was changing his sentence.
Russia was in its third year of a
bloody war against Germany.
The Tsar had lost so many men that he
needed even his enemies to fight for him.
But my father wasn't good enough.
Josef Visarionovich Djugashvili,
age 38,
born in Gori in the province
of Georgia.
Exiled to Siberia
for revolutionary activities.
Nevertheless, subject to conscription
into the imperial army.
Conscript has the following
deformities:
Left arm
two inches shorter than right arm.
Possibly a congenital defect.
Second and third toes of left foot:
webbed and joined.
The mark of the devil.
Rejected!
My father robbed banks to raise money
for the outlawed Bolshevik Party.
His favorite alias was Koba.
He hunted during the day and at night
he played cards with cut-throats
and thieves.
Our people were starving.
They blamed the Tsar.
And he was forced to abdicate.
The new government freed all
political prisoners.
And exiled revolutionaries like
my father were granted amnesty.
The rich and the nobility fled.
Koba was going home.
So was Lenin,
the leader of the Bolshevik party
- my father's idol.
bHBO Pictures
Presents/b
bA Mark Carliner
Production/b
bA film by
Ivan Passer/b
bRobert Duvall/b
There's Lenin, Koba, Lenin!
b- STALIN -
/b
Koba! Koba!
bJulia Ormond/b
Sergei!
Most of the old friends were there -
like Sergei and Olga Alliluyev.
Olga!
- Oh, such a long time.
And... Nadya.
Little Nadya!
Hey! Why aren't you there with them?
I'll see him tomorrow.
Nadya was to become my mother.
Olga, what the... she's a woman!
Not yet... Not Yet!
Comrades! Soldiers, Workers, Sailors!
I thank you
for the overthrowing the Tsar.
But the Great War still continues.
Did you overthrow the Tsar
to continue his bloody war?
No-o-o!
Did you overthrow the Tsar so
the peasants would remain landless?
No-o-o!
Did you overthrow the Tsar so
the workers and their families
would continue to starve?
No-o-o!
The people demand peace!
Now!
The people demand bread.
Now!
The people demand land.
Now!
Towards the unfinished revolution!
The proletarian revolution!
It took the Bolshevik six more months
to finish the revolution
and set up the communist government.
No-one was allowed to own anything.
The Tsar and his family were executed.
And a new war broke out.
Civil war.
bCasting by
Joyce Nettles/b
bMusic by
Stanislas Syrewicz/b
bEdited by
Peter Davies/b
Koba's favorite song.
Let's play that.
You remember?
I've remembered everything
you've told me about him.
And I remember how he saved my life
when I was drowning in the Black Sea.
You were not drowning,
you were playing in the water...
and he brought you back to us.
I was chocking water and he swam
to save me.
You were three years old!
- I remember!
bLine producer
Don West/b
"Black Swallow. "
- Nadya's record.
She's how old now?
- Seventeen. That dedicated.
She could discuss theory with Lenin.
- That I like to hear.
bWritten by
Paul Monash/b
So Koba...
- No... Stalin.
Stalin?
- My new name.
Steel?
- Steel.
But for you old friend,
and friends and comrades like you
I'm always Koba.
To Stalin!
- No. To Lenin!
bDirected by
Ivan Passer/b
Nadya became one of
Lenin's secretaries.
A year later she joined Stalin
who was sent to the southern front.
Just leave you take it to the
secretariat - was that your own idea?
What did you say? What?
With that civil war I said maybe
I could be more useful.
Useful... ?
Useful... ?!
Braided deep to Stalin.
For watching him,
reporting on him?
No, helping him.
So, that is - Stalin needs help;
Stalin needs help
from a nineteen-year-girl?
To assist you, to take notes.
- Who for?
Who taught you to watch Stalin?
Who?
Was it Trotsky? Or Lenin?
Nadya thought
Stalin was going to change Russia.
She was right.
Do you have a notebook? Not yet
- take this. And the pencil here.
Ready?
- Yes.
Write!
In this compartment Stalin told me
he would do anything and everything
to stabilize the southern front.
stern measures.
But... they said that you were only
to collect grain...
not get involved
in military activities.
Stalin does not obey orders
unless he agrees with them.
You always become the leader.
- Not always, not.
Yes!
Always my father says.
You want things your way
and you get them.
What else does he say?
You're a hero.
You organized daring robberies,
escapes from prisons.
You are a giant among pigmies.
I am a small humble man,
the son of a cobbler
and an illiterate washer woman.
The rose bud opens,
blue bows all around...
The larch flew higher,
the nightingale sings so fine...
Look at you - an army commander!
Look at you,
commissar of nationalities.
Chosen by Lenin himself.
Klim Voroshilov,
this is Nadya Alliluyeva,
Sergei's daughter.
You have your mother's eyes.
A Bolshevik aristocrat, ha?!
Filipov. Kavelenko. Tsarist officers.
- Yes.
Do you trust them?
Trotsky does, do you?
- Trotsky is a war commissar,
and he's the commander
of the Red Army.
You disagree with Trotsky or not?
Not exactly!
Good!
Then you agree to the need
for vigilance?
Yes, absolutely! Resolute vigilance!
Here's a list of unreliable officers.
I want them to be summoned here
immediately.
Trotsky should be informed.
- Trotsky does not understand!
We do.
All the officers on your list
are here,
as you requested, Koba!
Why? What's the reason?
Because I fought for you, bastards!
This barge was not sunk, Klim.
Be very careful.
They'll all be lost.
Be very, very careful.
"24 former Tsarist officers
suspected of treason
have drowned...
Unfortunate accident.
Replacing them with reliable elements. "
No, that's murder!
Murder, murder...
He says - an accident.
on a barge, and the barge sank.
And who put them on the barge?
Irreplaceable professional officers...
And who killed them?
Stalin!
I demand his immediate recall!
Stalin is a trusted comrade.
Replace him, or I resign.
With Trotsky or Stalin.
Trotsky or Stalin?
You don't understand -
it must be Trotsky AND Stalin.
We need you BOTH!
Trotsky never forgave my father.
They avoided each other. Even when
living in the Kremlin apartments
with the rest of the party leaders.
bThe Kremlin
April 1919/b
It was there
my parents celebrated their wedding.
Look! You're still so young!
You were younger than me
when you ran away with papa.
So I was but you should've seen
your papa:
He was so handsome!
An idealistic young revolutionary.
Exactly like Koba.
No, Koba's not like your papa.
You think he's too old?
He's a Georgian. I know Georgian men.
But you?!
I know:
you don't approve.But I want to be with him.
Feel happy for me.
For us.
Nadya, Nadya. Nadenka.
Koba is... here looking for you.
She isn't that far away!
Joy, eternal joy!
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