Admiral
Admiral
| 09 October 2008 (USA)
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This is a story of a great love facing the greatest drama of the history of Russia. Admiral Kolchak is a true war hero and beloved husband and father. One day he meets Anna, the love of his life and the wife of his best friend. The revolution in his heart faces the revolution in his own country His destiny is to become the Supreme Ruler of Russia.

Reviews
AniInterview

Sorry, this movie sucks

Beystiman

It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.

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Fairaher

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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InformationRap

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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ironhorse_iv

After being sent out to the sea, two times before, in the Russo-Japanese War and the First World War. All that Vice Admiral, Alexander Kolchak (Konstantin Khabenskiy) wants to do, is find who is his true-love is: his wife, Sofia Kolchak (Anna Kovalchuk) & fame poet, Anna Timiryova (Elizaveta Boyarskaya) back home. However, the call of war, is calling his name, once more, as he has to make, another choice, choose to lead of the anti-communist White Movement against the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War, for the love of his country or abandoned his noble cause, for the chance for a normal life with his love ones. Without spoiling the movie, too much, the film remind me, so much of 1965's Doctor Zhivago in story-structure, having flashbacks tell most of the story. However, unlike Doctor Zhivago, this movie's lacks the epic scope in the cinematography department. As much as I love war scenes in this war film, there is this eerily unrealistic that come with some of the sequences. A good example of this, come with the navy battles, during the opening. Not only are most of those scenes, historic inaccuracy, like the sinking of SMS Friedrich Carl in November 1915, when it sunk for real, two years earlier; but the computer-animation ships don't look like, they're really there. It looks a bit fake-looking. It was bit, over the top to see that ship blows apart and sinks within seconds with a clear big loss of lives by Russian mines. When, actually, the Friedrich Carl was stayed afloat for several hours, enough for the light cruiser SMS Augsburg to arrive to the scene and rescue most of the crew, and only 8 crew members were lost. Nevertheless, that fault; the war scenes in the ground scenes were still intense and well-shot. I like how they didn't sugarcoat, the violence. It's bloody, gory, and very gruesome. I just wish, the CGI effect were done, a little better. Directed by Andrey Kravchuk, the romantic sequences are kinda below standards, too as the movie rarely gives anytime, for the relationship between Kolchak and Timiryova to deliver. The two, barely show any chemistry for each other. Another thing, the film fails to tell, is a little background, like how Kolchak honestly became an Admiral. I'm not saying the film has to show the events of his life during the Russo-Japanese War, but a small mention would do. After all, Kolchak's life during that war, was very interesting and intense. Another thing, the movie doesn't show, is how Kolchak became the leader of the White Movement after his meeting in Petrograd. You would think the movie would show, his relationship with France, the United States, and the United Kingdom, more and how he almost got sent to Mesopotamia. That, or show his time, exile overseas in Japan. Even, his polar explorer career wasn't mention or expose much. It would make a lot more sense, if the movie mention that the reason, why he choose to come back to Siberia to fight back against the reds, is because he knew that area, best. However, the film doesn't even do that. Nor does it expose, the many of deaths by citizens, cause both from the Reds and the Whites, during this time. Yes, the whites did attack towns as well. While, there is a lot of debate if Kolchak in true-life was a natural patriotic hero for liberty, or an autocratic man seeking power. It's just nice to see that, after decades of being vilified by the Soviet government, Kolchak is now just now, seem as a controversial historic figure in post-Soviet Russia. He's not good nor bad. I just wouldn't say, Konstantin Khabenskiy is good as a romantic lead, but as a commander, he has the voice to pull it off. He comes off, kinda stern, but also somewhat heart-warming at parts. Elizaveta Boyarskaya as Anna Timiryova is a beautiful, however, her character lacks depth, so her acting doesn't shine, besides loving the Kolchak character in most of her key scenes. I would love to see, more of her acting, in other ways, like showing Anna's career as poet and a nurse. The movie doesn't even show, any of her poems at all. Nor does the movie talk or show Anna Timiryova's young son, the fame avant garde artist Vladimir Timirev, who was around, Kolchak are the time. Despite that, the movie is pretty good. I like how the title uses the old, Russian orthography that was abandoned after the October Socialist Revolution of 1917. That was pretty cool. The movie is indeed in Russian, but DVD does have English subtitles. Overall: Despite some faults, Admiral is still a movie worth, seeing. It's kinda rare to see, a Russian movie about the White Movement. So check it out!

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robert-642

Oh dear! What a load of rubbish. What could have been an enjoyable historical film charting the fall of the Russian monarchy and the rise of communism ended up as a Latin American styled, melodramatic soap opera. It's a pity they didn't add a bit of comedy then it could have qualified as a romantic comedy drama. The cuts between the protagonist and his mistress were far too many - they halted the development of the story. One moment men are have their limbs blown off and the next shot is of her writing lyrical love letters. Had they cut the romance scenes down by 95% it would have been an excellent historical drama - they certainly had the budget for it.And finally. The film was also ruined by the constant location pop ups. One moment they tell you they are in Omsk, three minutes later you are in Petrograd and then a minute after you are back in Omsk! I wouldn't mind but all the places looked the same so why bother? I'd like to have thought it was for the non Russian audience but it wasn't! Save your precious life and watch something more interesting.

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AFilotti

The film focuses on the love story between Admiral Kolchak and Anna Timiryova, in the context of the tragic events of the Russian revolution and civil war. And rightly so, the main feature is the love story, while history is left to the background.It also does not focus on the life of Anna Timiryova after Kolchak's death - she has been arrested six times and spent long years in the Gulag. But she always remembered the two tragic years when she had been able to be with her lover.The lyrics of the theme song are one of Anna Timiryova's poems. Unfortunately a film cannot focus on poetry, but it should be remembered that the Timiryova's poems have been compared the the poetry of Boris Pasternak.And Boyarskaya really shows that she understood the tragism of Timiryova's fate.

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Tatiana Gorshenina

When I was about to watch this film I did not bother to read the critical articles in the papers or in the Internet. Initially I looked upon the film as just an entertainment, but the impression turned to be much deeper. What puzzles me is the reaction towards the film in the Russian media. After I left the cinema I was most convinced that "Admiral" is worth almost unanimous public acclaim for this film is an attempt to investigate probably the most complicated and still painful period in the history of Russia. And show this period through the destiny of Admiral Kolchak. According to the Khabensky’s words he was to show not a dictator, but a man in love who has also duties before his country but cannot deny his feelings. That is why "Admiral" though being a historic movie is actually neither about war, nor politics. It is a great and beautiful love story. After "Admiral" I was curious to learn more about the Civil War and the figure of Kolchak. Of course it is studied at school, but in fact what is written in the school textbooks is a total mess of facts and dates. But now the reading is more interesting as I can imagine this distant historic statesmen and thus I get a clearer picture of the Civil War in Siberia. Admiral Kolchak’s life was full of everything one can wish to himself: he discovered new lands in the Arctic Ocean and named them, he knew what it is like to win great battles, he was loved by faithful and brave women, he led enormous armies and gave aspiration to so many people. He was the symbol of honorable struggle. I would say that even dry historic books about Kolchak are as exciting as novels. So his screened biography is also breathtaking. "Admiral" is probably the best modern Russian film.

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