Knowledge (XXG)

Admiral Ushakov (film)

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333: 397: 329:, and declares war on Russia. In Crimea, a liaison officer informs the English spy Orfano that war is beginning. The British are arranging that the Crimean Tatars rise up in revolt when the Turks land in Crimea. Orfano's task is to get rid of Ushakov, and he enlists Tikhon Prokofiev to kill him. Instead of agreeing to the order, Prokofiev attacks Orfano, but is forced to stop when a group of sailors passes by. Orfano informs Count Mordovtsev that Ushakov is harboring a runaway convict. When Mordovtsev goes to report this to Potemkin, Senyavin arrives with the news that Turkey has declared war on Russia. 1019: 332: 228: 408:, the Russian fleet passes under the fire of coastal batteries, and then falls in line with the Turkish fleet. During the battle, Ushakov's flagship draws close to the flagship of Said-Ali. Ushakov notices the Turkish admiral and shouts to him, "Hey, Said-Ali, I'll teach you to make promises to the Sultan!" The battle lasts until late at night and ends with the defeat of the Turkish fleet. 31: 703:
The Battle of Kaliakria is shown as a decisive rout of the Turkish fleet, but the Turks did not lose a single ship and were able to sail away thanks to the structural superiority of their ships. However, the Turkish fleet was strongly disorganized - most of the ships scattered along the Rumeli coast,
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analyze Ushakov's tactics in the battle. Foote sees his violation of the rules of engagement as barbarous, but Nelson admires his innovations. Nelson's superior officer reminds him of the fate of Admiral Bing, who was shot for violating the regulations of the Admiralty. In Constantinople, the Turkish
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rages among the workers. Tikhon Prokofiev, nicknamed the Ragged Ear, encourages the workers to flee the city and set fire to the shipyards, at the instigation of the English spy Orfano. With the help of his sailors, Ushakov stops the rebels and organizes a fire-fighting brigade to put out the fire. A
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to let him act at his own discretion. Before the battle, Prokofiev confesses to Ushakov that he is a runaway convict, but Ushakov orders him to take his post. Ushakov's three ships break away from the squadron and maneuver to the head of the Turkish line. The Turks open fire, but their shots fall
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work on constructing the fleet, Ushakov conducts artillery training for the officers. Throughout the film, he stresses the importance of accuracy in artillery firing. Potemkin arrives to witness the launching of the ships. The head of the newly created Black Sea Admiralty board, Count Mordovtsev,
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During the Russo-Turkish War, Count Voinovich was about 40 years old and five years younger than Ushakov. In the film, he is shown as an old man. Nikolai Svobodin, the actor who played Mordovtsev, was 55 years old during filming. The real Mordovtsev was 37 years old in 1791, when the film ends.
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Upon the death of Potemkin in 1791, Mordovtsev becomes Commander of the Black Sea Fleet. He is determined to make Ushakov more obedient. He tells him that an officer has a voice, a boatswain has a pipe, and a sailor is no more than a tool for obeying orders. Without arguing, Ushakov departs and
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wrote, "With a huge cast populating a lavish, sprawling assortment of period backgrounds, the picture combines spectacle and a surprisingly simple and persuasive close-up of the hero. 'Admiral Ushakov' is a good example of Soviet free-handedness in old-fashioned, grand-scale pageantry, with no
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Captured in battle at Tendra, the Turkish battleship "Meleki-Bahri" is depicted as three-deck (that is, carrying at least 90 guns), whereas in reality it was a two-deck 66-gun ship. In addition, Meleki-Bahri was captured by the battleship Mary Magdalene, and not by St. Paul, as the film shows.
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The Turkish sultan swears that the sky will soon fall to the ground and the waters of the Danube will flow backward than its fleet will be defeated. This phrase was actually the answer of the chief of the fortress Ismail Aidozle-Mehmet Pasha to the ultimatum of Suvorov before the assault.
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ignore the statements. Potemkin decides to surprise the audience with a display of military might. At his signal, Ushakov commands the battleships to fire on an abandoned fortress. Ushakov, in his excitement at the accurate firing of the gunners, cries out "Well done Vasiliev, a glass of
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short. Ushakov forbids shooting back until the ships are within firing distance. The Turkish commander orders his sailors to prepare for boarding, but the Russian ships open a devastating round of fire on the Turkish line. The Turkish
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informs Potemkin that Ushakov has not been training his officers strictly according to naval statutes. Potemkin sees the potential of a talented naval commander, and dismisses his transgressions. Workmen cut the ropes holding the
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was also established for sailors who risked their life defending the Soviet Union. The USSR Department of the Navy and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs advised on the script. Filming was conducted at the fortress in
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strict quarantine regime is introduced and the plague is brought under control. Viktor Ermolaev, a mere boy, asks Ushakov to enlist in the Russian Navy. Ushakov refuses him, because the ships are not yet finished.
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having received damage of varying degrees. The Turkish flagship sank, having already reached Constantinople, which made a heavy impression on the inhabitants of the capital of the Ottoman Empire.
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decides the best way to contain the Russian fleet is by goading the Turkish sultan into war against Russia. The sultan takes the bait, orders the Russian ambassador to be imprisoned in the
1165: 1160: 352:. Fidonisi is the Greek name for the island. The Turks have a clear advantage of 17 battleships against 2 Russian, but Brigadier General Ushakov, commanding the battleship 663:. Perhaps, the actions of the Black Sea Fleet are considered from the Turkish coast in 1789-1790, when a blow was struck on a number of Turkish ports, including Sinop. 396: 297:
to inspect the fleet. Potemkin complains to the ambassadors that Turkish pirates operating in the Black Sea are using English and French weapons. The ambassadors of
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on drydock, and the battleship is launched into the sea. The boy, Viktor Ermolaev, despite protests from his mother, runs to the ship to join the Navy.
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in 1944, during his time at the front. Vinogradov's name is not listed in the credits, but his official bibliography cites the screenplay.
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H.H.T. (18 January 1954). "The Screen in Review: 'Admiral Ushakov,' First of Two-Part Biography, Has Premiere at the Stanley Theatre".
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for everyone!". Despite his indelicacy, the Empress promotes Count Voinovich to Rear Admiral, and Ushakov to Brigadier General.
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After the capture of Ishmael, the Ottoman Empire still had a large fleet, so the references to a "broken fleet" are strange.
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was created for Soviet Naval officers for outstanding achievements leading to victory over a numerically superior enemy. The
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Sultan and his associates discuss the situation. Admiral Said-Ali, an Algerian, reassures the Sultan that new ships from the
1205: 1042: 693: 341: 273:. Three years later, Ushakov arrives at the Kherson shipyards with a contingent of sailors and craftsmen. An epidemic of 1195: 1180: 293:
Fast forward to 1787. At the head of an entourage of courtiers and foreign ambassadors, Catherine the Great travels to
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are faster and more powerful than the Russian ships. He promises the Sultan to bring back Ushakov in an iron cage.
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is under fire from both sides, causing the Turkish line to turn away and flee. The Russians are victorious.
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to oversee the construction of the Black Sea Fleet. This means giving up a career at the royal court in
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The narrator attributes a victory at Sinop to Ushakov. This battle was won not by him, but by
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The same actor portrays the Turkish Sultan both at the beginning and the end of the
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Potemkin is depicted as blind in the left eye. He was blind in the right eye.
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won a battle against two ships of the Turkish fleet, sinking the Turkish
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The original version of the script was written by the historian-novelist
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to publicize the importance of Admiral Ushakov in naval history. During
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Certificate for Best Foreign Film at the Vichy Film Festival (1954).
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Ushakov's flagship during the entirety of the film is the 66-gun
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This article related to a Soviet film of the 1950s is a
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results in another Russian victory. In London, officers
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Feodor Feodorovich Ushakov 14: 1176:Films scored by Aram Khachaturian 600:The film was commissioned by the 1221:Russian-language war drama films 1106:Russian biographical drama films 1017: 412:returns to complete the port of 235:The film portrays the career of 1101:Soviet biographical drama films 675:The Transfiguration of the Lord 440:as Tikhon Alekseevich Prokofiev 1171:Films about the Russian Empire 1141:Films directed by Mikhail Romm 1121:Russian historical drama films 1096:1950s biographical drama films 638:Russo-Turkish War of 1787-1792 500:as Empress Catherine the Great 319:Russian fleet on the Black Sea 1: 1216:Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792) 1191:Films set in Saint Petersburg 1151:Films set in the 19th century 1146:Films set in the 18th century 1116:Soviet historical drama films 694:Battle of Kerch Strait (1790) 342:Russo-Turkish War (1787-1792) 1136:1950s Russian-language films 1111:1950s historical drama films 327:Fortress of the Seven Towers 265:asks the Commander-in-Chief 1242: 1012: 494:as Medical Doctor Ermolaev 340:In the second year of the 895: 518:as Admiral Horatio Nelson 198: 28: 16:1953 film by Mikhail Romm 822:. Scarecrow Press, 2008. 721:evidence of scrimping." 506:as Khvorin, palace guard 350:Snake Island (Black Sea) 323:William Pitt the Younger 146:April 23, 1953 1226:1950s Soviet film stubs 1091:Russian war drama films 758:. 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Index


Mikhail Romm
Aleksandr Shtein
Anatoly Vinogradov
Ivan Pereverzev
Boris Livanov
Sergei Bondarchuk
Vladimir Druzhnikov
Gennadi Yudin
Yu-Lan Chen
Aleksandr Shelenkov
Yeva Ladyzhenskaya
Aram Khachaturian
Mosfilm
Russian
historical
war film
Mikhail Romm
Ivan Pereverzev
Boris Livanov
Sergei Bondarchuk

Fyodor Ushakov
Catherine the Great
Paul I
Attack from the Sea
Fyodor Ushakov
Grigory Potemkin
St. Petersburg
plague

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