- Testimony (film)
Infobox Film
name = Testimony
image_size =
caption = Testimony DVD
director = Tony Palmer
producer = Michael Kustow Grahame Jennings
writer = David Rudkin
narrator =
starring =Ben Kingsley
music =Shostakovich The London Philharmonic Orchestra
cinematography = Nic Knowland
editing = Tony Palmer
distributor =Digital Classics DVD DVD 2006
released = 1987
runtime = 151 min.
country = UK
language = English
budget =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website = http://www.digitalclassicsdvd.co.uk/product.asp?ProductID=891| Digital Classics DVD
amg_id =
imdb_id = 0096250"Testimony: The Story of Shostakovich" is Tony Palmer's award winning film starring
Ben Kingsley , based on the memoirs ofShostakovich (1906–1975) as dictated in the book Testimony (edited bySolomon Volkov , ISBN 0-87910-021-4) and filmed inPanavision . Some consider the book to be a fabrication.Awards
*Winner of the Gold Medal for Best Drama -
New York International Film Festival
*Winner of theFellini Prize -UNESCO
*Winner of the Critics Prize -Sao Paolo International Film Festival Quotes
"A masterpiece...exceptional; an undoubted hit" -
The Sunday Times "The best British film of the year" - Films and Filming
"Exciting and deeply moving piece of cinema" -
The Independent "Testimony is one of those comparatively rare events nowadays – a real piece of cinema. Palmer's prowess as an editor, his knack of juxtaposing image and music – something which has remained his forte since he first caused a stir back in the sixites with Buddhist monks burning to
The Beatles – has a field day in Testimony. Most importantly for a movie about a composer, there is always the feeling that Palmer "understands" the music. For a start, he puts to rest the hoary old cliché that the privateShostakovich is only to be found in his chamber music – try listening to the Seventh, Eighth, Ninth and Fourteenth symphonies – but he also brings vividly alive musical details (like the composer's use of unison scoring) in colour sequences showing the orchestra, as in the climax of the Fifth ... a truly remarkable film." - Derek Elley 'Films and Filming'"Shorn of the composer’s youthful iconoclasm or any scenes of happier private life, this is the familiar tale of Shostakovich v Stalin, but told with the individual flair of a born image-maker in black and white scenes tellingly lit and interspersed with flashes of colour (mostly red). Kingsley captures well the composers ironical tone as well as his nervousness under fire ... As a concentrated dose of pure anguish, it’s compellingly done." -
BBC Music Magazine Cast
*Sir Ben Kingsley as Dmitri Shostakovich
*Sherry Baines as Nina Shostakovich
*Magdalen Asquith as Galya Shostakovich
*Mark Asquith as Maxim Shostakovich
*Terence Rigby as Stalin
*Ronald Pickup as Tukhachevsky
*John Shrapnel as Zhdanov
*Robert Reynolds as Brutus
*Vernon Dobtcheff as Gargolovsky
*Colin Hurst as Stalin’s Secretary
*Joyce Grundy as Stalin’s Mother
*Mark Thrippleton as Young Stalin
*Liza Goddard as The English Humanist
*Peter Woodthorpe as Glazunov
*Robert Stephens as Meyerhold
*William Squire as Khatchaturyan
*Murray Melvin as The Film Editor
*Robert Urquhart as The Journalist
*Christopher Bramwell as Vanya
*Brook Williams as H.G. Wells
*Marita Phillips as Madam LupinskayaMusic
The London Philharmonic Orchestra
*Leader: David Nolan
*Conductor:Rudolf Barshai The Golden Age Singers
*Chorus Master: Simon Prestonee also
*
Dmitri Shostakovich
*Stalinism
*Testimony (book)
*Solomon Volkov External links
*imdb title|96250
Further reading
* Volkov, Solomon: Shostakovich and Stalin: The Extraordinary Relationship Between the Great Composer and the Brutal Dictator; Knopf 2004. ISBN 0-375-41082-1
* Fay, Laurel: Shostakovich versus Volkov: Whose Testimony? –The Russian Review , vol. 39 no. 4 October 1980 pp. 484–493.
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