
The Stone Cross (1968)
Credits
- Regie
- Leonid Osyka
- Genre
- Drama
- Speelduur
- 81 minutes
- Land
- Ukraine SSR
- Taal
- Ukrainian, Russian
- Ondertiteling
- English
Storyline
Stone Cross as seen by Ukrainian critic Daria Badior:
A beautiful and painful tale of emigration caused not by hopes for a better life, but by despair. The main character, Ivan, decides to move to Canada following his two sons and their families. Their home soil, which was promising and rewarding before, turned out to be disappointing and devastating. The hard work did not bring prosperity, on the contrary, leading to the hard decision to emigrate and move away from home.
The cinematic Stone Cross is an adaptation of two stories by the prominent Ukrainian writer of the early 20th century, Vasyl Stefanyk: The Stone Cross (1900) and A Thief (1901). The film was adapted for the screen by Ivan Drach, a Ukrainian poet, writer, and political figure. The collaboration of various talents and references to Ukrainian culture was typical of the cinema of the 1960s, a period marked by the “Khrushchev Thaw” and a relative liberalization of cultural production in the USSR, which allowed several cinematic new waves to emerge, including the Ukrainian one known as “Ukrainian poetic cinema.” While the term is somewhat debatable and vague enough to serve as an umbrella, it has been cemented in textbooks and refers to a significant body of Ukrainian Soviet films made between 1965 and 1972. Leonid Osyka’s Stone Cross is among them: beautifully shot, rich in symbolism, and depicting the harsh realities of village life, it is considered one of the cornerstones of the Ukrainian cinematic canon.