Action Crime
Typically of the heady days of early Soviet cinema, this is constructed according to the fast, sharp editing principles advocated by Eisenstein, complete with symbolic inserts; but in terms of subject matter, it's much less explicitly political than most movies emerging from Russia in the '20s. Chronicling a young sailor's descent into a murky, treacherous underworld of pimps and thieves, after having encountered a Louise Brooks lookalike at a fairground and missed his departing boat, it's a lively moral fable that delights in vivid visual effects and quirky characterisations. If the plot occasionally reveals gaping holes, and the tacked-on ending urging the clearance of the Leningrad slums seems to be rather gratuitous, there's enough going on to keep one attentive and amused.
Directed by
Grigori Kozintsev, Leonid Trauberg
Written by
Adrian Piotrovskiy
Pyotr Sobolevsky
Vanya Shorin, Red fleet sailor
Yanina Zheymo
Hooligan girl
Andrei Kostrichkin
Drummer
Emil Gal
Koko, vaudeville performer
Lyudmila Semyonova
Valya
Sergei Martinson
Orchestra conductor
Aleksandr Kostomolotsky
Arnold Arnold
Editor
Antonio Tserep
Tavern Owner
Nikolay Gorodnichev
House manager
V. Lande
Cafe dancer
Yevgeniy Kumeyko
Hooligan
I. Berezin
Hooligan
Tatyana Ventsel
Viktor Plotnikov
Salvation army member
Mikhail Shifman
(uncredited)
Viktor Chaynikov
Sailor (uncredited)
N. Foregger

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