9/10
The film itself was a work of indisputable genius, its every frame a combination of the architectonic and the purely theatrical...
10 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Reportedly filmed it Stalin's personal suggestion, Part I glorified the 16th century prince who overcame the power of Russia's feudal lords and the treachery of his own friends and family to forge the Russian nation… Although Ivan resorted to cruel and often repugnant means to achieve his goals, the end results, at least in Eisenstein's eyes, made the means acceptable…

Condemned by some critics as unbearably slow and ponderous, Part I of "Ivan the Terrible" is regarded by others as a towering work of genius... It is easy to understand why Stalin, one of the most ruthless of leaders, approved the first half of the epic; it is equally easy to see why Part II, completed in 1946, was banned by an irate government…

Far less effective than Part I, it shows Peter becoming increasingly insane, overwhelmed by hate, bitterness, and doubt as to the legitimacy of his mission… Eisenstein suffered a heart attack on the day he completed editing the film, and he died in 1948… For a decade thereafter his completed masterwork remained under official proscription; it received its first screening in 1958, five years after Stalin's death
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