The Big Man (1908 film)

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Written byI. I. Kolyshko[a]
CinematographyAlexander Drankov[2]
The Big Man
Russian: Большой человек
Directed byAlexander Drankov
Written byI. I. Kolyshko[a]
Produced byAlexander Drankov
CinematographyAlexander Drankov[2]
Release date
  • 1908 (1908)
CountryRussian Empire

The Big Man (Russian: Большой человек) is a 1908 Russian silent short film directed by Alexander Drankov. It is a lost film.[3]

The film is a screen version of Kolyshko's play "The Big Man" performed by artists of the theatre [ru] of the St. Petersburg Nicholas II People's House [ru].[3]

The play (1908) was a political satire. Critics and the public perceived that it was targeting Sergei Witte, recognizable in V.A. Ishimov (Russian: В.А. Ишимов), the protagonist of the play. Answering to the censorship, the author did admit that he did use Witte's "outstanding features as a major personality", however he denied the intention to ridicule Witte. The scandalous interpretation widely discussed in press created a promotion for the play and resulted in its commercial success, performed in Moscow, St. Petersburg, as well as in the periphery.[4][5]

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