Four White Shirts

    Four White Shirts
    1967

    Synopsis

    Cezars Kalnins, portrayed by "Latvian Harrison Ford” Uldis Pucitis, installs telephones by day and composes pop songs by night. The puritan Soviet censorship deems Cezars’s lyrics "unsuitable and frivolous” and "unfit for the Soviet youth”. In fact, it can be argued that this assessment matches the opinion of the Soviet cinema authorities in regard to this film as a whole, since "Four White Shirts” was immediately banned and released in cinemas only in 1986. The creative boldness and stubbornness, evident in both Cezars’s bitingly ironic verses and the film’s unconventional narrative structure and fresh, new-wave-inspired mode of expression, turned out to be equally problematic for the hero and for the film itself, as well as for its director whose representation of the actual mechanisms of Soviet censorship ended up too realistic for his own good.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Uldis PūcītisCēzars
    • Līga LiepiņaBella
    • Dina KupleAnita Sondare
    • Arnolds LiniņšMiervaldis Tralmaks
    • Pauls ButkēvičsRalfs
    • Rostislav Goryayev
    • Ernests Karelis
    • Antonija Kleimane
    • Oļģerts Kroders
    • Irēna Lagzdiņa

    Recommandations

    Soyez le premier à écrire une critique sur Four White Shirts.