Michel Strogoff (1926 film)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Michel Strogoff
CinematographyFédote Bourgasoff
Léonce-Henri Burel
Nikolai Toporkoff
Music byWerner R. Heymann
Production
company
Société Générale des Cinématographes Éclipse
Distributed byCiné-Location-Eclipse
Release date
  • June 30, 1926 (1926-06-30)
Running time
2 hr. 48 min.
CountryFrance
LanguageSilent (French intertitles)

Michel Strogoff is a 1926 French

Ivan Mozzhukhin, Nathalie Kovanko, and Acho Chakatouny.[1] It is an adaptation of Jules Verne's 1876 novel Michael Strogoff. In 1961 Tourjanski directed a sequel titled Le Triomphe de Michel Strogoff.[2]

Cast

Production

A number of filmmakers involved were exiles from the

art direction was by Eduardo Gosch, César Lacca, Alexandre Lochakoff, Vladimir Meingard, and Pierre Schild who recreated the atmosphere of the mid-nineteenth century Russian Empire
.

References

  1. ^ Dixon p. 48
  2. ^ Travers, James (19 December 2014). "Review of the film Michel Strogoff (1926)". frenchfilms.org. Retrieved 3 November 2023.

Bibliography

  • Bryony Dixon. 100 Silent Films. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

External links