Italic Title: | no |
Sen-bong (Avangard: Koreyskiy Kolkhoz) | |
Native Name: | Сен-бонг (Авангард: корейский колхоз) |
Director: | Igor Vereshchagin |
Narrator: | L. Korobchenko |
Music: | Yevgeny Brusilovsky (composer and arranger) (singer) Li Nikolai (singer) |
Studio: | Alma-Ata Film Studios |
Country: | Soviet Union |
Language: | Russian |
Sen-bong (Avangard: Koreyskiy Kolkhoz) (ru|Сен-бонг (Авангард: корейский колхоз)|lit=Vanguard (Vanguard: Korean Kolkhoz)) is a 1946 Soviet-Kazakh documentary film.
Its subject is Avangard, a kolkhoz in the Kazakh SSR, founded in 1936 by Koryo-saram who had been relocated from a previous kolhoz.[1] The documentary is the first Soviet film about Koryo-saram after their mass deportations from their original homes in the Soviet Far East in 1937.[2]
According to Kazakhstanskaya Pravda, Sen-bong is one of the documentary films to have "justly taken its place in the golden trove of Kazakh documentary filmmaking".[3]