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Agony: The Life & Death of Rasputin (1975)

Agony: The Life & Death of Rasputin (1975)
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Produced in 1975 and banned for a decade in his native Russia, filmmaker Elem Klimov's expressionistic account of Grigory Rasputin's influence on Russia's monarch and the damning events that followed started a firestorm of controversy that would make cinema history. A nomadic Siberian Monk whose charismatic hold over Nicholas II (Anatoli Romashin) eventually resulted in his country's entry into World War I, the licentious Rasputin (Aleksei Petrenko)'s remarkable life set the stage for revolution, and changed his country forever. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Director(s):
Elem Klimov
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Agony: The Life & Death of Rasputin

Produced in 1975 and banned for a decade in his native Russia, filmmaker Elem Klimov's expressionistic account of Grigory Rasputin's influence on Russia's monarch and the damning events that followed started a firestorm of controversy that would make cinema history. A nomadic Siberian Monk whose charismatic hold over Nicholas II (Anatoli Romashin) eventually resulted in his country's entry into World War I, the licentious Rasputin (Aleksei Petrenko)'s remarkable life set the stage for revolution, and changed his country forever. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
142 mins
Director(s):
Elem Klimov
Writer(s):
Semyon LunginIlya Nusinov
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    James A. C.

    Bush and Rumsfeld didn't have to bother with Gitmo. Simply force detainees to watch this film and they'd confess all their sins. What a ridiculous, idiotic piece of work. Don't waste your time on this one.

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