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UCLA Film & Television Archive and American Cinematheque present

Andriesh / The First Lad

A young boy wearing a fur cap.
December 8, 2024 - 7:00 pm
In-person: 
Introduction by series curator Bernardo Rondeau.


Admission is free. No advance reservations. Your seat will be assigned to you when you pick up your ticket at the box office. Seats are assigned on a first come, first served basis. The box office opens one hour before the event.

Andriesh

Ukraine, 1954

A young shepherd tasked with protecting his village’s flock meets a passing bogatyr (Slavic knight) and receives a magic flute. But when a nefarious sorcerer hears the instrument’s gleeful tones, he wreaks havoc upon the boy’s village, kidnapping humans and animals alike. Our hero joins forces with the bogatyr and embarks on a fantastic voyage to confront the evil wizard, encountering wondrous creatures and dazzling landscapes along the way. Though co-directed, Sergei Parajanov’s feature debut draws from the same source material as his diploma film (now lost): a poem by Moldovan author Emilian Bukov. Brimming with folkloric detail and practical effects, Andriesh is an enchanting fairy tale deserving rediscovery.

DCP, color, in Russian with English subtitles, 62 min. Director: Sergei Parajanov, Yakov Bazelian. Screenwriters: Emilian Bukov, Grigori Koltunov, Sergei Lialin. With: Kostia Russu, Nodar Shashik-Ogly, Kirill Shtirbu.

The First Lad

Ukraine, 1958

Parajanov’s spirited second feature is a more traditional piece of Socialist cinema, though imbued with the auteur’s charming eccentricities. Soccer and romance clash as a love triangle forms on a collective farm between a mechanic, a Komsomol (All-Union Leninist Young Communist League) secretary and a soldier. Parajanov’s vibrant musical comedy pays tribute to his film studies instructor,  Ihor Savchenko, a pioneer of the collective farm comedy genre. Parajanov also infuses this populist entertainment — the biggest commercial success of his career — with folkloric touches. As the director states, “For the first time I discovered for myself the Ukrainian village – discovered its texture of overwhelming beauty, its poetry. And this enchantment of mine I tried to express on the screen.” 

DCP, color, in Russian with English subtitles, 85 min. Director: Sergei Parajanov. Screenwriter: Pavel Lubensky, Viktor Bezorudko. With: Hryhorij Karpov, Liudmyla Sosjura, Jurij Satarov.