Love's Berries
Ягoдка любви / Ягідки кохання (Love's Berries) | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alexander Dovzhenko |
Written by | Alexander Dovzhenko] |
Starring | Margarita Chardynina-Barska Dmitri Kapka Maryan Krushelnytsky Nikolai Nademsky Ivan Zamychkovsky |
Cinematography | Danylo Demutsky |
Edited by | Alexander Dovzhenko |
Distributed by | VUFKU-Odessa |
Release date |
|
Running time | 30 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Languages | Silent film Russian intertitles |
Love's Berries (Template:Lang-ru, Template:Lang-uk) is a 1926 Soviet comedy film by Ukrainian director Alexander Dovzhenko. The film was Dovzhenko's debut and the screenplay was written in three days.[1] It deals with a dandified barber's attempts to get rid of his "love berry" - his illegitimate offspring.[2]
Plot
Hairdresser Jean Colbasiuc learns from his girlfriend about an unexpected materialization of their child. Not ready to be a father, the young man tries to get rid of the baby left in his care. After a few unsuccessful attempts to place the baby onto unsuspecting citizens, by this time Colbasiuc receives a notice from the People's Court, agrees to the registration of marriage and only then learns from Lisa that the child, who served as a catalyst for the incident, was borrowed by her from her Aunt.
Cast
- Maryan Krushelnitsky as Jean Kolbacjuk (as Maryan Krushchelnitsky)
- Margarita Barskaya as Young woman
- Dmitriy Kapka as Toys salesman
- Ivan Zamychkovsky as Tolstjak
- Volodimir Lisovsky as Old man on whom the fat man offloads
- A. Belov as Fat client
- L. Chembarsky as Fop on whom the fat man offloads
- N. Zemgano as Photographer
- K. Zapadnaia as Girl on the boulevard
- Nikolai Nademsky as Seltzer water salesman
References
- ^ Jay Leyda (1960). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. p. 219.
- ^ "Ягодка любви". Russia-K.
External links
- 1926 films
- 1926 comedy films
- 1920s Russian-language films
- Soviet comedy films
- Russian comedy short films
- Films directed by Alexander Dovzhenko
- Dovzhenko Film Studios films
- Ukrainian silent short films
- Soviet black-and-white films
- Ukrainian black-and-white films
- All-Ukrainian Photo Cinema Administration films
- 1926 short films
- Soviet silent short films
- Russian black-and-white films
- Russian silent short films
- Silent comedy films
- Soviet film stubs
- Ukrainian film stubs
- Short silent comedy film stubs