BOREC I KLOUN
T. it.: Il lottatore e il clown. Scen.: Nikolaj Pogodin. F.: Sergej Polujanov. Scgf.: Vasilij Ščerbak, Boris Ėrdman. Mus.: Jurij Birjukov. Int.: Stanislav Čekan (Ivan Poddubnyj), Aleksandr Michajlov (Anatolij Durov), Anatolij Solov’ëv (Boucher), Boris Petker (Truzzi), Ija Arepina (Mimì), Georgij Vicin (Enrico), K. Ignatova (Esterina), G. Abrikosov (Fiš), L. Topčiev (Orlando). Prod.: Mosfil’m. 35mm. D.: 95’. Col.
Film Notes
Borets i kloun’s heroes are two historical figures: Ivan Poddubny, the most illustrious Russian wrestling champion, and Anatoli Durov, founder of a circus dynasty. Konstantin Yudin, a talented genre film director, had prepared this tribute to the “old circus” for years. He died suddenly after a few weeks of shooting, and Boris Barnet was asked to step in – which he did in his own way, changing the casting and improvising as much as he was allowed to. The film bears the name of both directors. Barnet told Georges Sadoul that it had become one of his favourites.
Indeed, he made this picture-book of times gone by into one of his most spirited films in the shooting and editing process, playing on the qualities and shortcomings of the Sovcolor process, and remembering his own short-lived career in the boxing ring.
The story unfolds over many years, with no concern for symmetry or clarity: Esterina, the circus owner’s daughter, who runs off with her lover, reappears later sans fiancé, now a mischievous Parisienne, against all logic: clearly two roles have been merged to favour Kiunna Ignatova, who had been Barnet’s heroine in Lyana (1955). The more subtle of the two heroes is not the young lead, but the colossal Poddubny (Stanislav Chekan, Yudin’s inspired casting), in the same reversal as in By the Bluest of Seas (Barnet was to give Chekan a short, impressive scene in Annushka).
Passions and friendships are sudden and lasting. Deaths occur unannounced: the trapeze artist Mimi, Poddubny’s love, who wanted to be lighter than air, is defeated by gravity. Here Barnet remembers D.W. Griffith, whom he studied under Kuleshov’s teaching. Godard couldn’t know how right he was when he wrote in 1959 that “the famous Triangle style, more than in Allan Dwan or Raoul Walsh, is to be found in Boris Barnet’s work today”.
Adapted from Bernard Eisenschitz, Boris Vassilievitch Barnet, Editions de l’Œil, Paris 2024