The Horse That Cried

Mark Donskoi revealed a lovely romanticism in this tender story of a woman eloping with her lover after escaping an arranged marriage.

DIRECTOR
Mark Donskoi
YEAR
1957
COUNTRY
USSR
RUNTIME
98 minutes
ORIGINAL TITLE
Dorogoy tsenoi

Also known as At Great Cost, this adaptation of a story by Mikhailo Kotsyubinsky—a Ukrainian writer executed in the Stalinist purges but rehabilitated in 1955—anticipates the wave of Sixties poetic cinema in its focus on star-crossed lovers and its celebration of nature. Set in the 1930s, the film begins as Solomia is forced into an arranged marriage. She escapes with her lover, Ostep, and for a while it looks as if the fugitives will make a clean getaway. Yet eventually they come to the attention of the police, who mistake them for being part of a gang of thieves. One of the major figures of the earlier current of socialist realism, Donskoi, in one of his first post-Stalin era productions, here loosens his style to reveal a delicate romanticism rarely felt in his earlier films.

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