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Hasan-Arbakesh [1965]
Available digitallyHU_OSA_00002354
MovingImageIconMoving Image
General Information
Director/Creator
General Information
Original Title
Khasan-Arbakesh
General Information
Language
Russian
General Information
Language of Subtitles
English
General Information
Published
Tajikistan : Tajikfilm, 1965.
General Information
Physical Description
DVD-ROM (91 min.)
Contents Summary
At first glance, youmight think that the film is going to tell a trivial story about an arbakesh named Hasan, who has a cart and a horse and dreams only of earning enough to be able to marry his beloved. As in a traditional fairy tale Hasan is young and handsome, strong and determined and very much in love. The fairy-tale plot, however, is set against the very real historical background, which soon starts to interfere brutally with the romantic thrust of the story. The film was shot during the so-called "Thaw" of the 1960s and contains a metaphorical protest against the establishement of Soviet regime in Tajikistan. Its main theme ia the clash between the traditional Tajik culture, and the new "invading" Soviet one. Unlike most of the "revolutionary" films that were shot in the Soviet Asian republics and focused on the bloody fights between the "reactionary" forces of traditional societies and the "righteous" Soviet "liberators," "Hasan-Arbakesh" shows the process of peaceful sovietization, that nevertheless, ruthlessly reroutes the fates of the characters. Hasan's cart is replaced by a truck, personal work becomes collectivized, the veil is jettisoned and a liberated woman, like Hasan's beloved Saodat, joins the Komsomol and is sent to teach in a romote kishlak. By the end of the film, the ever-joyous,singing and dancing Hasan is only a shadow of his former self, lost in a totally new strange world, full of "kolkhoz peasants", "proletarians" , pioneers with bugles and drums, and endless columns of cars, "busy building Stalin's communism."
Subjects
Genre
Bibliographic Information
Note
Duration: 01:31:00
Holdings
Item TypeCurrent LocationCollectionCall NumberVolume InfoShelving LocationPublic Note
DVD-ROMOSA Film LibraryOSA Film Library----
DIGIFILMOSA Film LibraryOSA Film LibraryFL Record 0622-Audio VisualAccess Copy, MP4 format
Hasan-Arbakesh [1965]
Available digitallyHU_OSA_00002354
MovingImageIconMoving Image
General Information
Director/Creator
General Information
Original Title
Khasan-Arbakesh
General Information
Language
Russian
General Information
Language of Subtitles
English
General Information
Published
Tajikistan : Tajikfilm, 1965.
General Information
Physical Description
DVD-ROM (91 min.)
Contents Summary
At first glance, youmight think that the film is going to tell a trivial story about an arbakesh named Hasan, who has a cart and a horse and dreams only of earning enough to be able to marry his beloved. As in a traditional fairy tale Hasan is young and handsome, strong and determined and very much in love. The fairy-tale plot, however, is set against the very real historical background, which soon starts to interfere brutally with the romantic thrust of the story. The film was shot during the so-called "Thaw" of the 1960s and contains a metaphorical protest against the establishement of Soviet regime in Tajikistan. Its main theme ia the clash between the traditional Tajik culture, and the new "invading" Soviet one. Unlike most of the "revolutionary" films that were shot in the Soviet Asian republics and focused on the bloody fights between the "reactionary" forces of traditional societies and the "righteous" Soviet "liberators," "Hasan-Arbakesh" shows the process of peaceful sovietization, that nevertheless, ruthlessly reroutes the fates of the characters. Hasan's cart is replaced by a truck, personal work becomes collectivized, the veil is jettisoned and a liberated woman, like Hasan's beloved Saodat, joins the Komsomol and is sent to teach in a romote kishlak. By the end of the film, the ever-joyous,singing and dancing Hasan is only a shadow of his former self, lost in a totally new strange world, full of "kolkhoz peasants", "proletarians" , pioneers with bugles and drums, and endless columns of cars, "busy building Stalin's communism."
Subjects
Bibliographic Information
Note
Duration: 01:31:00
Holdings
DVD
Item Type
DVD
Current Location
OSA Film Library
Current Location
OSA Film Library
Call Number
-
Volume Info
-
Shelving Location
-
Public Note
-
Digital Film