Trust (1976 film)

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Trust
Lenfilm Studio
Distributed byFenno-Filmi
Release date
  • 21 April 1976 (1976-04-21)
Running time
95 minutes
CountriesFinland
Soviet Union
LanguageFinnish / Russian

Trust (

drama film directed by Edvin Laine and Viktor Tregubovich.[1] The film portrays the events leading up to the Finnish Declaration of Independence from Russia in 1917 and especially the role of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin in them. The main roles are played by Kirill Lavrov as Lenin and Vilho Siivola as P. E. Svinhufvud
.

Edvin Laine received the state film artist award for the film, and Vilho Siivola received the

Jussi Award for best actor. At the Riga Film Festival in 1977, the film was awarded a special jury prize for artistic merit in depicting the beginning stages of peaceful coexistence between two neighboring countries.[2] After completion, the film was shown in schools as an educational film, but it did not do very well in cinemas. According to the current general perception, it strongly represents the spirit of the era of Finlandization between Finland and the Soviet Union.[2][3]

Plot

Trust takes place at the end of December 1917, when the Finnish delegation has traveled to

Bolshevik government
, and Bolshevik leader V. I. Lenin has to choose accordingly whether to recognize the independence of bourgeois Finland. The main part of the plot consists of flashback scenes, which on the one hand describe the central events of Finland's struggle for autonomy and independence, and on the other hand the shaping of Lenin's nationality policy and personal relationship with Finland in the years 1899–1917.

The film shows, among other things, the following historical events: the Finnish mission bringing the

Russian Duma in 1910; Parliament led by Speaker Svinhufvud refuses to accept national legislation in 1910; the parliament led by Speaker Kullervo Manner convenes in the fall of 1917 despite the dissolution order; Lenin hides in Helsinki with Kustaa Rovio in the fall of 1917; Kullervo Manner, Yrjö Sirola and K. H. Wiik
attend Lenin's speeches in December 1917; and finally Lenin's government gives the document of recognition of independence to the Svinhufvud delegation in December 1917.

At the end of the film, a clip of a newsreel from the 1975 Helsinki OSCE meeting is attached.

Partial cast

References

  1. ^ Rollberg p.643
  2. ^ a b Luottamus – Elonet.fi (in Finnish)
  3. ^ Harto Hänninen: Luottamus – 70-lukulainen näkemys Suomen itsenäistymisestäYle (in Finnish)

Bibliography

  • Rollberg, Peter. Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2008.
  • Öhman, Mia. Luottamus – kinoleninianaa parhaasta päästä. Filmihullu, 6/2017. (in Finnish)