One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (film) explained

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Director:Caspar Wrede
Producer:Caspar Wrede
Screenplay:Ronald Harwood
Starring:Tom Courtenay
Alfred Burke
James Maxwell
Eric Thompson
Music:Arne Nordheim
Cinematography:Sven Nykvist
Editing:Thelma Connell
Studio:Group W Films
Leontes Films
Norsk Film A/S
Runtime:105 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Norway
United States
Language:English

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (Norwegian: En dag i Ivan Denisovitsj' liv) is a 1970 biographical drama film based on the novel by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn with the same name.

Plot

The film stars Tom Courtenay as the title character, a prisoner in the Soviet gulag system in the 1950s who enduresa long prison sentence. It tells of a routine day in his life.

Cast

Reception

Roger Greenspun, in a respectful but unenthusiastic review for The New York Times, spoke highly of the cinematography, the "intelligent exploitation of realistic locations," and "estimable performances" by Courtenay and Skjonberg, but said that the movie carries "the aura of an almost official view of high quality, as if this were how an important movie made from an important novel ought to look."[1]

Banned in Finland

Finnish film director Jörn Donner tried to get the film to Finland, but the Finnish Board of Film banned the showing of the film. In 1972, Donner complained to the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland. The Supreme Administrative Court voted for the banning 5–4 on 28 February 1972. In 1972 and 1974, Swedish television showed the film, and the Swedish television mast in Åland was shut down during the movie to prevent Finns from seeing the film.

The director of the Finnish Board of Film, Jerker Eeriksson, said that the ban of the film was political because it harmed Finnish–Soviet relations. The director, Caspar Wrede, who then lived in England, refused to campaign against the ban to avoid bad publicity abroad.

The film was shown in Finland in 1993 and 1994 in the Orion movie theater in Helsinki, as well as in the cinema club in Vaasa. Finnish television showed the film in 1996 on the TV1 YLE channel.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Greenspun. Roger. Film 'Ivan Denisovich' Best at Long Distance. May 17, 1971. The New York Times. 7 November 2021.