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  1. Crime and Punishment (Swedish: Brott och straff) is a 1945 Swedish drama film directed by Hampe Faustman and starring Faustman, Gunn Wållgren, Sigurd Wallén and Elsie Albiin. It was shot at the Centrumateljéerna Studios in Stockholm. The film's sets were designed by the art director Harald Garmland.

  2. Crime and Punishment: Directed by Hampe Faustman. With Hampe Faustman, Gunn Wållgren, Sigurd Wallén, Elsie Albiin. Dostoyevsky's novel is one of world literature's most filmed works. Raskolnikov, a poor student, is planning to assassinate a hated pawnbroker.

    • (72)
    • Drama
    • Hampe Faustman
    • 1948-02-28
  3. This is a ranking of the movies I've reviewed based on Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel "Crime and Punishment." I enjoyed doing this sort of adaptation study and list making so much for classics of English-language Gothic literature (see my Dorian Gray, Dracula and Frankenstein lists) that I'm branching out to choosing to read other literary mainstays for the purpose of, then, seeking out cinematic ...

  4. 1945: Crime and Punishment, 1945 Swedish film directed by Hampe Faustman. [6] 1951: Crimen y castigo, 1951 Mexican production directed by Fernando de Fuentes. [7] 1956: Crime and Punishment, French film of 1956, directed by Georges Lampin and starring Lino Ventura and Jean Gabin.

    • Background
    • Plot
    • Characters
    • Themes
    • Structure
    • Style
    • Reception
    • English Translations
    • Adaptations
    • External Links

    At the time Dostoevsky owed large sums of money to creditors and was trying to help the family of his brother Mikhail, who had died in early 1864. After appeals elsewhere failed, Dostoevsky turned as a last resort to the publisher Mikhail Katkov and sought an advance on a proposed contribution. He offered his story or novella (at the time he was no...

    Part 1

    Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, a former law student, lives in extreme poverty in a tiny, rented room in Saint Petersburg. Isolated and antisocial, he has abandoned all attempts to support himself, and is brooding obsessively on a scheme he has devised to murder and rob an elderly pawn-broker. On the pretext of pawning a watch, he visits her apartment, but remains unable to commit himself. Later in a tavern he makes the acquaintance of Semyon Zakharovich Marmeladov, a drunkard who recently squ...

    Part 2

    In a feverish and semi-delirious state Raskolnikov conceals the stolen items and falls asleep exhausted. He is greatly alarmed the next morning when he gets summoned to the police station, but it turns out to be in relation to a debt notice from his landlady. When the officers at the bureau begin talking about the murder, Raskolnikov faints. He quickly recovers, but he can see from their faces that he has aroused suspicion. Fearing a search, he hides the stolen items under a large rock in an...

    Part 3

    Razumikhin tends to Raskolnikov, and manages to convince the distressed mother and sister to return to their apartment. He goes with them, despite being drunk and rather overwhelmed by Dunya's beauty. When they return the next morning Raskolnikov has improved physically, but it becomes apparent that he is still mentally distracted and merely forcing himself to endure the meeting. He demands that Dunya break with Luzhin, but Dunya fiercely defends her motives for the marriage. Mrs Raskolnikova...

    In Crime and Punishment, Dostoevsky fuses the personality of his main character, Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, with his new anti-radical ideological themes. The main plot involves a murder as the result of "ideological intoxication," and depicts all the disastrous moral and psychological consequences that result from the murder. Raskolnikov's psyc...

    Nihilism, rationalism and utilitarianism

    Dostoevsky's letter to Katkov reveals his immediate inspiration, to which he remained faithful even after his original plan evolved into a much more ambitious creation: a desire to counteract what he regarded as nefarious consequences arising from the doctrines of Russian nihilism. In the novel, Dostoevsky pinpointed the dangers of both utilitarianism and rationalism, the main ideas of which inspired the radicals, continuing a fierce criticism he had already started with his Notes from Underg...

    The environment of Saint Petersburg

    Dostoevsky was among the first to recognize the symbolic possibilities of city life and imagery drawn from the city. I. F. I. Evnin regards Crime and Punishmentas the first great Russian novel "in which the climactic moments of the action are played out in dirty taverns, on the street, in the sordid back rooms of the poor". Dostoevsky's Petersburg is the city of unrelieved poverty; "magnificence has no place in it, because magnificence is external, formal abstract, cold". Dostoevsky connects...

    The novel is divided into six parts, with an epilogue. The notion of "intrinsic duality" in Crime and Punishment has been commented upon, with the suggestion that there is a degree of symmetry to the book. Edward Wasiolek, who has argued that Dostoevsky was a skilled craftsman, highly conscious of the formal pattern in his art, has likened the stru...

    Crime and Punishment is written from a third-person omniscient perspective. It is told primarily from the point of view of Raskolnikov, but does at times switch to the perspective of other characters such as Svidrigaïlov, Razumikhin, Luzhin, Sonya or Dunya. This narrative technique, which fuses the narrator very closely with the consciousness and p...

    The first part of Crime and Punishment published in the January and February issues of The Russian Messenger met with public success. In his memoirs, the conservative belletrist Nikolay Strakhov recalled that in Russia Crime and Punishment was the literary sensation of 1866. Tolstoy's novel War and Peace was being serialized in The Russian Messenge...

    There have been over 25 film adaptations of Crime and Punishment. They include: 1. Raskolnikow (aka Crime and Punishment, 1923) directed by Robert Wiene 2. Crime and Punishment (1935 American film) starring Peter Lorre, Edward Arnold and Marian Marsh 3. Crime and Punishment (1970 film) Soviet film starring Georgi Taratorkin, Tatyana Bedova, Vladimi...

    Criticisms 1. University of Minnesota study guide 2. Text and Analysis at Bibliomania 3. Text about Crime and Punishment by Lev Oborin(in Russian) Online text 1. Crime and Punishment at Standard Ebooks 2. Crime and Punishment at Project Gutenberg 3. Crime and Punishment public domain audiobook at LibriVox 4. Full text (in Russian) 5. Lit2Go audiobo...

  5. Crime and Punishment (1945) directed by Hampe Faustman • Reviews, film + cast • Letterboxd. 1945 ‘Brott och straff’ Directed by Hampe Faustman. A Swedish version of Crime and Punishment. Raskolnikov, a poor student, is planning to assassinate a hated pawnbroker. Cast. Crew. Details. Genres. Releases.

  6. Brott och straff película dirigida por Hampe Faustman y protagonizada por Hampe Faustman, Gunn Wållgren y Sigurd Wallén. Año: 1945. Sinopsis: La novela de Dostoyevsky es una de las obras más filmadas de la literatura mundial. Raskolnikov, un estudiante pobre, planea asesinar a un prestamista odiado. - Cine.com