Cosmic Voyage or The Space Voyage (Russian: Космический рейс, romanizedKosmicheskiy reys: Fantasticheskaya novella) is a 1936 Soviet science fiction silent film produced by Mosfilm. It was one of the earliest films to represent a realistic spaceflight, including weightlessness as well as one of the last Soviet silent era films.[1][2]

Cosmic Voyage
Theatrical poster
Directed byVasili Zhuravlov
Written byAleksandr Filimonov
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky
Produced byBoris Shumyatskiy
StarringSergei Komarov
Kselniya Moskalenko
Vassili Gaponenko
Nikolai Feoktistov
Vasili Kovrigin
Production
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Release date
  • January 1936 (1936-01)
Running time
70 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageSilent film with Russian intertitles

Plot

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In the year 1946, the Soviet space program is undergoing turmoil. Professor Sedikh, who is planning to lead the first crewed exploration to the Moon, is denounced by his rival Professor Karin as being too old and too mentally unstable for the mission. Professor Sedikh, aided by his assistant Marina and a youth named Andryusha, disregard Professor Karin's authority and make a successful landing on the Moon. Although a few problems occur at the Moon, including the discovery of a damaged oxygen tank and Professor Sedikh's becoming trapped under a fallen boulder, the expedition is a success and the cosmonauts return to Moscow.

Cast

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  • Sergei Komarov as Pavel Ivanovich Sedikh
  • Ksenia Moskalenko as Marina, Karin's assistant
  • Vassili Gaponenko as Andryusha Orlov
  • Nikolai Feoktistov as Capt. Viktor Orlov
  • Vasili Kovrigin as Professor Karin
  • Andrey Karasyov
  • Sergey Stolyarov

Production

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Sergei Komarov as a cosmonaut

Kosmicheskiy reys: Fantasticheskaya novella was initially conceived in 1924 by Russian filmmaker Vasili Zhuravlov, but it was not pursued for production until 1932, when Komsomol (the Communist Union of Youth) recommended the creation of film that would spur an interest in space studies. Zhuravlov consulted with Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the noted aeronautical theorist and rocket science engineer, on the screenplay. Tsiolkovsky died shortly after the film was completed.[3]

Two spaceships in the film were named after the Soviet leaders Joseph Stalin and Kliment Voroshilov. The film's cosmonauts enter liquid-filled chambers to buffer the impact of takeoff and landing, and they communicate their landing to the Earth by spelling out "CCCP" (the Russian-language acronym for "USSR") with reflective substances spread across the lunar surface.[4]

Kosmicheskiy reys: Fantasticheskaya novella was shot as a silent film and had only a brief release in early 1936 before being removed from circulation by Soviet censors, who felt that stop-motion animated sequences of cosmonauts hopping across the low-gravity lunar surface were antithetical to the spirit of "socialist realism." It was not widely seen again until the 1980s.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Atkinson, Michael (2014). "Cosmic Voyage". silentfilm.org. San Francisco Silent Film Festival. Retrieved February 27, 2021. A groundbreaking amateur rocket engineer and physicist idolized after his death (in 1935) by Soviet culture, Tsiolkovsky made sure that astronautic considerations like landing shock and oxygen supplies were key to the scenario, making it the first semi-accurate cinematic depiction of space travel (and ahead in several ways of the H.G. Wells-derived British epic Things to Come, released that same year).
  2. ^ "Kosmičeskij rejs / Cosmic Voyage". www.edition-filmmuseum.com. Filmmuseum München. Retrieved February 27, 2021.
  3. ^ Phil Hall (July 9, 2010). "The Bootleg Files: The Space Voyage". Film Threat. Retrieved July 12, 2010.
  4. ^ Glenn Erickson (October 26, 2006). "Kosmicheskiy reys: Fantasticheskaya novella". DVD Talk. Retrieved July 12, 2010.
  5. ^ David Jeffers (July 25, 2007). "Hijack at the Cosmodrome". Seattle International Film Festival SIFFBlog. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved July 12, 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

Sources

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  • David Christopher, "Stalin's "Loss of Sensation": Subversive Impulses in Soviet Science-Fiction of the Great Terror," Journal of Science Fiction, Vol. 1, No. 2 (May, 2016), 18-35.
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