The Devil's Wheel

5.3 / 10

(8 votes)

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.

Country:

Soviet Union

Genre:

Action,

Crime

Duration:

40 minutes

Year:

1926

Director:

Grigori Kozintsev

)}
Company:

Leningradkino

Cast:
Lyudmila Semyonova

Valya

Pyotr Sobolevsky

Vanya Shorin

Emil Gal

Vaudeville Performer

Sergei Gerasimov

Man The Question

Andrei Kostrichkin

Drummer

Crew:
Grigori Kozintsev

Director

Leonid Trauberg

Director

Adrian Piotrovsky

Writer

Evgeny Eney

Art Direction

Andrey Moskvin

Director of Photography