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  1. Vladimir of Staritsa. Vladimir Andreyevich ( Russian: Владимир Андреевич; 9 July 1535 – 9 October 1569) [1] was the last appanage Russian prince. [2] His complicated relationship with his cousin, Ivan the Terrible, was dramatized in Sergei Eisenstein 's 1944 film Ivan the Terrible .

  2. Maria Vladimirovna of Staritsa [1] [2] (c. 1560 in Staritsa – 1612, 1614, or 1617) was a Russian princess. She was the daughter of Prince Vladimir of Staritsa and his wife, Princess Eudoxia Romanovna Odoevskaya, and, through her father, descended from Sophia Palaiologina . On 12 April 1574, in Novgorod, she married Magnus of Livonia.

  3. Vladimir Andreyevich was the last appanage Russian prince. His complicated relationship with his cousin, Ivan the Terrible, was dramatized in Sergei Eisenstein's 1944 film Ivan the Terrible. Introduction Vladimir of Staritsa

    • Plot
    • Cast
    • Genesis
    • Production
    • Style
    • Reception
    • Screenplay
    • Academic Works
    • External Links

    Part I

    In the prologue Ivan's mother and her lover are murdered by the boyars. Later Ivan is enthroned as the grand prince of Moscow. Part I begins with Ivan's coronation as the tsar of all Russia, amid grumbling from the boyars and silent jealousy from his cousin, Vladimir of Staritsa and especially from Vladimir's mother and Ivan's aunt, the evil-looking Yefrosinya Staritskaya. Ivan makes a speech proclaiming his intent to unite and protect Russia against the foreign armies outside her borders and...

    Part II

    Part II opens in the court of King Sigismundof Poland, to whom Kurbsky swears allegiance. Sigismund promises to make Kurbsky ruler of Ivan's territories, once he exploits the tsar's absence by conquering them. The plan is foiled when an emissary announces that Ivan has returned to Moscow. A flashback shows Ivan as a child, witnessing his mother being poisoned and removed, then as a young teenager standing up to the condescension of the boyars who want to rule over young Ivan's head. He begins...

    Ivan Vasilyevich (Nikolay Cherkasov) – The movies show Ivan more as monarch than as man, detailing his struggles to unite Russia and his difficulties in overcoming the traditional, boyar-run government. While not exactly sympathetic, Ivan is shown as having to fight fire with fire—having to be ruthless and brutal for the good of the country. In som...

    During World War II, with the Axis forces approaching Moscow, Eisenstein was one of many Moscow-based filmmakers who were evacuated to Alma Ata, in the Kazakh SSR. There, Eisenstein first considered the idea of making a film about Tsar Ivan IV, aka Ivan the Terrible, whom Joseph Stalin admired as the same kind of brilliant, decisive, successful lea...

    Stalin commissioned Eisenstein to make a film about Ivan the Terrible in 1941, as part of the Soviet historical revisionist campaign.Eisenstein grew deeply interested in Ivan the Terrible, and filled over 100 notebooks with his ideas for the film. The first film, Ivan The Terrible, Part I, was filmed between 1942 and 1944, and released at the end o...

    Eisenstein wrote about Ivan The Terrible’s tone, saying that he wished chiefly to convey a sense of majesty; the actors spoke in measured tones, frequently accompanied by Prokofiev's superb, solemn music, Ivan the Terrible, op. 116. Nikolai Cherkasov's style of acting was realistic, but highly stylised and intense. He was said to have been in a sta...

    Parts I and II have been polarizing amongst viewers, being included in both The Fifty Worst Films of All Time (and How They Got That Way) by Harry Medved and Randy Lowell and 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, edited by Steven Schneider. However, the films have since become highly regarded, being awarded 4 out of 4 stars by critic Roger Ebert...

    Eisenstein, Sergei M. (1963) Ivan the Terrible: a screenplay; translated by Ivor Montagu and Herbert Marshall; edited by Ivor Montagu. London: Secker / Warburg (published in the US by Simon & Schus...

    Eisenstein, Sergeii Mikhailovich, et al.The Film Sense. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975. ISBN 978-0-15-630935-6
    Eisenstein, Sergei, and Jay Leyda. Film Form. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1949. ISBN 0-15-630920-3
    Ejzenstejn, Sergej, et al. The Eisenstein Reader. London: British Film Institute, 1998. ISBN 0-85170-675-4
    Neuberger, Joan. Ivan the Terrible. London: I. B. Tauris, 2003.
    Ivan the Terrible part I at IMDb
    Ivan the Terrible part II at IMDb
    Ivan the Terrible part I at Rotten Tomatoes
    Ivan the Terrible part II at Rotten Tomatoes
  4. After the metropolitan's intercession, however, Vladimir and his mother regained Staritsa in December 1540, and the cousins spent the next few years together at court.1 In contrast to his father's policy, Ivan allowed Vladimir, next in the line of succession, to marry before he himself had a son.

  5. Both rulers of the Staritsa principality—Andrei and his son Vladimir—would meet tragic fates. Yet before the town existed, there was a Russian presence in the form of the Dormition Monastery ...

  6. Vladimir Andreyevich (1533 – 9 October 1569) was the last appanage Russian prince. His complicated relationship with his cousin, Ivan the Terrible, was dramatized in Sergei Eisenstein's movie Ivan the Terrible. The only son of Andrey of Staritsa and Princess Euphrosyne Khovanskaya, Vladimir spent his childhood under strict surveillance in Moscow. In 1542, he was reinstated in his father's ...