"I Come From Childhood" The first film work that changed Vysotsky as an actor of "episodic" roles was the role of the tank driver Volodya in the film "I Come from Childhood" by the Belarusian director
Viktor Turov. They met due to Turov's interest in the author of "unusual songs". In the summer of 1965, Vysotsky came to Minsk for an audition at the suggestion of the film's director,
Alexander Knyazhinsky. After the audition, which Vysotsky passed, according to Turov, "not badly", several of his songs were recorded on professional wide magnetic tape. In the evening of the same day, Vysotsky sang his songs to the guitar in the dormitory where the operators lived. Informal communication between the director and the poet turned into friendship. Despite the fact that there were more successful auditions of other actors, Vysotsky was approved for the role. The thirty-year-old gray-haired tank captain, who had been burned in a tank during the war and had a scarred face, was chosen by the director to be the author and singer of his songs (they were not included in
Gennady Shpalikov's script). In August the film studio "Belarusfilm" signed a contract with Vysotsky to write and finish three works for the following films: "Brotherly Graves", "Stars" and "Height". Viktor Turow successfully integrated the songs deeply into the plot of the film; it was impossible to remove them without damaging the picture. "Brother's Graves" in the film was performed by
Mark Bernes. Vysotsky liked his heartfelt performance. According to the testimony of Bernes' wife, Lilia Mikhailovna Bernes-Bodrovoy, Vysotsky himself invited Mark Naumovich to perform this song in the movie. The film was shot in
Slonim,
Grodno,
Smolensk and
Yalta. According to the recollections of the crew members, Vysotsky behaved "as his own" while working on it, creating a friendly atmosphere of trust and complicity around him. The picture appeared on the screens at the end of 1966. For the first time the poet's songs sounded from the screen, and in the credits his name appeared for the first time in a new capacity — as the author of songs. In terms of acting, Vysotsky did not fully realize himself in this picture. The film received mixed reviews from critics; according to Turov, the press "trashed" it twice. The reviewer of the magazine "
Isskustvo Kino" A. Vartanov wrote: "There are no significant human characters, and the actors, in fact, there is nothing to play.
V. Belokurov,
E. Uvarova,
N. Urgant, V. Vysotsky find themselves in a very strange position, as if something remembered from previous roles, trying to fill the void of characters, but in vain ... " In those years the film studio, like any other company, had a compulsory production plan: the Odessa studio had to release five films by the end of the year. A very weak script, later renamed "We — the Possessed", reached the novice directors
Stanislav Govorukhin and
Boris Durov in April 1966. Their attempts to rework the plot of the work ended in failure, and the debutants decided to base the film on songs — to make "a kind of poem about the mountains". At first the creators of the picture tried to attract
Yuri Vizbor to participate in the project, but he, dissatisfied with the dramaturgical material, refused to work. Vysotsky gave his consent and was approved almost without a trial for the role of the radio operator Volodya. The script and the role of the radio operator Borodacha, who stayed in the camp and warned his comrades of the danger, interested Vysotsky much less than the possibility of writing songs for the film. "Vertical" divides Vysotsky's life into before and after. After this movie, Vysotsky's fame skyrocketed vertically upwards. He saved "Vertical" from oblivion, if not for Vysotsky's songs, the movie would have been firmly forgotten. The film's director Stanislav Govorukhin admits that: "The movie owes its success to Vysotsky first and foremost, both his songs and his appearance on the screen".The work of the film group took place in the
Elbrus region, in the Baksan Gorge, and included mandatory climbing courses for the actors. The head of the group of instructors of the film was a professional mountaineer Leonid Eliseev. The shooting, which took place in real conditions at an altitude of over 3000 meters, required from the actors qualifications at the certain level, and in some scenes and masters of sports in
mountaineering. According to the results of filming Vladimir Vysotsky received a certificate and badge "
Mountaineer of the USSR". Eliseev, who became friends with Vysotsky and told him episodes from his mountaineering practice, became an unwitting co-author of the first written for the film "Song about a friend". If at the beginning of work on the film Vysotsky complained in a letter to his wife that he could not write about what he "did not know" and doubted the successful result, then, according to Govorukhin, soon the actor was imbued with the idea of mountaineering, and the songs "poured out of him like a cornucopia". The final version of the film included five of Vysotsky's songs; two of them: "Mountain Climber" and "The pure ice on the Earth, the pure..." were not approved. As a composer, the film's creators invited the then little-known
Sofia Gubaidullina. Her music for the film and orchestrations to Vysotsky's songs were accepted by the Hudsovet, who nevertheless had complaints about the picture itself: the commission did not like the ending, the lack of a pronounced dramaturgy. Due to the lack of time for reshoots, the film appeared on the screens without changes. In June 1967, the film "Vertical" was released in wide distribution. Most of the viewers saw Vysotsky on the screen for the first time, got acquainted with his new works, discovered that he was not a representative of the blatant world, singing about "little criminal", which sounded from tape recorders all over the country, but a dramatic actor and author of songs of various themes. The film was a big box office success. It was seen by 32.8 million viewers. "Vertical" noticed and critics, whose opinion was almost unanimous: "The film is weak, but the songs are good". Vysotsky's acting was not emphasized in the reviews, but the lyrics of the songs were printed in many publications. In the songs, and partly in Vysotsky's character from the film "Vertical", there are collected inner motives, sometimes already worked out, sometimes only sketched. He would develop them in his later roles. There is the theme of strength that strangely turns into weakness, the theme of unrequited love, the sacred belief in male friendship and mutual support, as well as the motif of being unrooted in everyday life, the eventlessness of his characters, which is constant in all of Vysotsky's film roles without exception.
Brief Encounters In the summer of 1966, Vysotsky told
Lyudmila Abramova that he had read the script of the film "Brief Encounters", written by Kira Muratova and
Leonid Zhukhovitsky, at the Odessa film studio, where he had come to negotiate with Stanislav Govorukhin about filming "Vertical": "A good script, a good role, the protogonistic one and again wearing beard". Vladimir Semyonovich passed the auditions; according to him, were quite successful, but the leader of Hudsovet approved for the role of geologist Maxim another artist —
Stanislav Lyubshin. Just before the launch of the picture in production found that Lyubshin is bound by contractual obligations with the tape "
The Shield and the Sword", and the creators of "Brief Encounters" were forced to return to the candidacy of Vysotsky. As recalled operator
Gennady Karyuk, 1966-1967 years for the actor became a period of endurance tests, because he had to combine work at the Taganka Theater with simultaneous participation in two films. The story of geologist Maxim's short-lived romance with the young barmaid Nadia (
Nina Ruslanova's film debut) and his complicated relationship with his wife — Executive Committee official Valentina Ivanovna Sviridova (this role was played by director Kira Muratova after the approved Soviet actress
Antonina Dmitrieva did not arrive on the set) is the core of the film "Brief Encounters", shot in the "natural" style of the 1960s. Maxim is a typical hero of the "sixties": unaccustomed, lonely and homeless; he combines "
Hemingway's" desire for free wandering with
Pechorin's desire for novelty. He leaves his loved ones without drama, returns without excuses, speaks of love with a light irony, and hums songs with tired mockery: "In the enchanted swamps / There live kikimors...". According to film historian Anna Blinova, only once in the soft film "the true Vysotsky broke through in a contrasting way": we are talking about the episode when Nadia, appearing at night at the geologists' campfire, brings Maxim a sewn jacket.And here in the picture: first Maxim's eyes shone, then his silent, passionate appeal. Vysotsky did not utter a single word, he showed the state of his hero's instant infatuation by his facial expression and plasticity. It was a moment of truth that convinced us that the geologist Maxim could be one of the great achievements of Vysotsky, if the image was created not in half tones and half voices, not with irony, not with feigned lightness, but with full force.When accepting the editing of "Brief Encounters" editorial board of the film studio made a number of complaints. In the conclusion of the commission, dated February 16, 1967, in particular, it was stated that the song performed by Maxim "Golololod" should be replaced, because it "carries a lot of clues, forcing a completely different interpretation of the entire film. Then the studio received a letter from the
State Committee for Cinematography, which noted that the heroine Nadia, "coming together with Maxim, in essence, commits a deeply immoral act. However, the authors do not condemn her for this, they do not give a moral assessment of Maxim's actions. Despite the fact that first in the director's script, and then in the picture were made changes, the final verdict of officials remained harsh: "The film did not turn out and the image of the hero. In the performance of actor V. Vysotsky character Maxim gets a vulgar shade. As a result, the tape received the lowest category and was quickly excluded from distribution. Nevertheless, Vysotsky called his role in "Brief Encounters" one of his favorites.
Intervention In the winter of 1967,
Gennadi Poloka was asked to begin work on the film "Intervention," based on the
play of the same name by
Lev Slavin. The director, who wanted to avoid the cinematic "stamps" that often saturated images of the
Civil War, wrote a kind of manifesto in the press, calling on artists to "revive the traditions of theater and cinema of the early years of the revolution". According to Poloka's plan, the film was to be shot, on the one hand, in order to accommodate the
spectaculous and, on the other, to raise serious historical questions. The main character of "Intervention" —the underground revolutionary Brodsky— was a participant and at the same time a "director" of the events in the tape. This character has attracted the attention of many actors: so, photo auditions were made with
Andrei Mironov, in test filming also participated Mikhail Kozakov, the role of Brodsky seemed attractive for
Arkady Raikin, too. Vysotsky, recommended to Poloka by
Vsevolod Abdulov, auditioned with
Olga Aroseva as Madame Xydias. Poloka was able to defend Vysotsky thanks to the support of
Grigory Kozintsev, who was then in charge of the director's workshop at Lenfilm. After the approval of the actor for the main role in the film became popular joke saying, formed during the Civil War and played with the names of tea merchants, sugar manufacturers and revolutionaries: "Tea is
Vysotsky's, sugar is
Brodsky's, Russia is
Trotsky's". The film was not accepted by the Goskino Commission, which considered that "Intervention" portrayed "our sacred events and Brodsky's character in an impermissibly
eccentric way". In October 1968, the board of the Committee on Cinematography issued a resolution stating that further work on "Intervention" was recognized as unpromising. All the materials of the film, including the
negatives and phonograms, were transferred to the
Gosfilmofond of the USSR. Members of the film group, not resigned to the ban on the film, tried to defend it. They signed a petition to
Leonid Brezhnev, stating that the allegations against the film were "tendentious and unfounded". According to
Valery Zolotukhin's diary, (he played the role of Jenya Ksidias in the film), he was the author of that letter. According to Gennady Poloka, "letter to the authorities" was written by Vysotsky. Despite all the efforts, during the lifetime of Vladimir Semyonovich "Intervention" was never released. Eight years after the end of filming, Gennady Poloka managed to restore a copy of the tape and showed it to the actor Brodsky: "We watched the two of us in an empty hall. He was sitting unusually quietly and continued to sit when the lights came on. The film was released after Vysotsky's death in 1987.
Two Comrades Were Serving Vysotsky joked that his filming in
Odessa could be attributed to two periods: "bearded" and "mustached". In 1966, while working on the film "Vertical" and "Short Meetings", he appeared before the audience in the form of two bearded characters with similar characters, and the next year, the revolutionary underground Brodsky from "Intervention" and the White Guard lieutenant Brusentsov from "Served Two Comrades" resembled each other by the presence of mustaches. But their resemblance did not end at the appearance - both were brave, risk-taking people of about the same age, who acted in 1919 in Odessa "on opposite sides of the barricades". In his letter to Lyudmila Abramova Vysotsky told about the difficulties in obtaining this role — the head of the acting department of "
Mosfilm" Adolf Gurevich was strongly opposed to the approval of the actor's participation in the film directed by
Yevgeny Karelov. Resolve the issue positively managed only with the help of
Mikhail Ilyich Romm (at that time — the head of the creative association "Comrade", where the film was shot): "he said in all ears that Vysotsky, de, he persuade, after which Gurevich could only go and kiss his ass, what he did immediately". Due to the fact that not a single Vysotsky suffered from the actions of this boss, among the actors went a joke: "A good man won't be named Adolf!" The film covers a short period of time when
Wrangel's army left the
Crimea. The author of the script
Valery Frid and the director of the film saw in the image of Alexander Brusentsov not the usual, stereotypical white officer who could be played by
Oleg Strizhenov,
Vasily Lanovoy,
Oleg Yankovsky, but a fierce, non-standard, strong and tough man. His role was intended to show the tragedy of the White Guard movement. Karelov's choice of Vysotsky as an actor may have been influenced by his image of tank captain Vladimir from the film "I Come from Childhood", the role of Galileo and Khlopusha in performances at the Taganka Theater. According to
Alla Demidova, the prototype of Brusentsov could also be a dragoon captain played by Vysotsky in the play "The Hero of Our Time". Irina Rubanova found a sketch of the role in the episode "White Guard" from "Ten days that shook the world", which was part of the repertoire of "Taganka". The actor, on photo auditions reminiscent of
Lermontov, demonstrated the necessary strength and anger, character, temperament, which the scriptwriters and looked for in the performer of this role. The positive heroes of the film were two Red Army soldiers: Karyakin (
Rolan Bykov) and Nekrasov (Oleg Yankovsky). The "white" and "red" plots existed in parallel in the picture. Vysotsky made the audience sympathize with his negative hero, creating the image of a cruel, intelligent, straightforward, fearless officer with undiminished principles, determined and assertive. According to film critic Anna Blinova, Vysotsky had all the same qualities in life, which allowed him to organically adapt to the role and turn it into a great acting success. A part of the episodes with Brusentsov was cut from the film. According to the testimonies of the participants of the shooting, the reason was the brightness, successful performance of the role of Vysotsky. He overplayed the "two comrades" and gave the White Guard officer qualities that he should not have according to the official ideas about the Civil War; his role came to the fore. The screenwriter Valery Fried rated Vysotsky's performance in the film as excellent. According to him, the actor "seems to be satisfied with his work". Vysotsky said: I thought it would be the best role I would ever play in a movie. And it probably would have been if you got what was filmed. But it didn't.
Master of Tayga In the early summer of 1968, director
Vladimir Nazarov invited Vysotsky and
Valery Zolotukhin to play roles in the film "Master of the Taiga". Zolotukhin agreed to play a "positive policeman" — Sergeant Sergezhkin, and Vysotsky got the role of rafting foreman Ivan Ryaboy — a rude thief. During this period against Vysotsky in the Soviet press was unleashed a broad newspaper campaign, the initiators of which - among other things — condemned his "husky wailing wild blatnyh songs and savoring thieves' jargon" and accused Vladimir Semyonovich in "attacks on our ideology and undermining the socialist system from within. Against the background of these events, the approval of the role was not without difficulties. In the district party committee told the director: "Vysotsky - this is a morally degraded man, rotten to the core...We do not recommend to take it. The director of the Taganka Theatre had also signed the permission with difficulties. The shooting of the film took place near the village of Viyezzhiy Log in the
Krasnoyarsk region. Zolotukhin and Vysotsky changed their place of residence several times. For some time they lived in an empty, abandoned Siberian house, which was left by the son of one of the villagers, Anna Filippovna, who had left for the city. "
Mosfilm" provided the actors with only two cots and some household utensils. A photographer of the film crew gave them a lamp with "five hundred candles". The work on the film was hard (also because of a very primitive script), Vysotsky constantly clashed with the director and the operator of the film, trying to make changes in the dramaturgy of the work and influence the shooting process. In a letter to
Veniamin Smekhov he reported: "You shoot slowly and unwillingly. My scenes are just too slow. Zolotukhin's are a little faster, but still. Each shooting day we feel anxious and demotivated. This trip for us is called "Summer is gone". Summer, rest, mood and dreams". Vysotsky and Zolotukhin had the opportunity to sing songs in the film. Zolotukhin sang "Oh, Frost, Frost", and Vysotsky reworked one of his earlier works about prospectors - "Somewhere there on the lake..." ("Ryaboy's Song"), and also suggested two new songs: "The House of Crystal" ("If I am rich like the king of the sea...") and "How many wonders lie behind the mists..."; the second of the works was not included in the film. His character, Ivan Ryaboy, added to the gallery of images of vagabonds created by Vysotsky, but unlike Maxim from "Short Encounters" and Volodya from "Vertical", this character "came" to the film not from the poet's tourist cycle, but from his early, "blatnoe" song and poetry. At the beginning of the tape, Ryaboy looks like a "sturdy industrialist", in the finale the viewer sees a man with a "pitch-black" soul. Vysotsky revealed the type of man in whom cruelty, despair, the desire to suppress and the ability to obey in the name of ruthless love coexist. On July 14, 1969, the movie premiered. It did not receive good critics in press, but was seen by 26.8 million people. At the screening in the
Central House of Cinema, Vysotsky and Zolotukhin received gifts from the
Ministry of Home Affairs: Zolotukhin received a personal watch, Vysotsky a certificate of honor "for active promotion of the work of the police". According to film historian Anna Blinova, despite the fact that the film starred, in addition to Vysotsky and Zolotukhin, such famous actors as
Lionella Pyryeva,
Mikhail Kokshenov,
Leonid Kmit, the box office receipts of the film was provided by Vysotsky. A photo of his character, Ivan Ryaboy, appeared in many newspapers and magazines, including the American
"Time" and the German "
Der Spiegel". Vysotsky himself did not name The Master of the Taiga among his creative successes and was not satisfied with the result.
Dangerous Tour The role of the poet Georgy Bengalsky (revolutionary Nikolai Kovalenko), played by Vysotsky in
Georgi Yungwald-Khilkevich's film "Dangerous Tour", was a kind of continuation of the image of the underground leader Brodsky from Intervention, and the films themselves, according to Vysotsky's researcher Elena Kuznetsova, turned out to be "extremely similar". Despite the thematic proximity of the two films, the attitude of the authorities to "Dangerous Tours" was from the beginning more favorable than to the work of Gennady Poloka. The director already announced in the preparation period that he saw in the role of George Bengalsky only Vysotsky, acting organically, which was taken into account when writing the script (according to the editor-in-chief of the Odessa Film Studio S. Strezhenyuk, Yungvald-Khilkevich "began hunting" for Vladimir Semyonovich since the shooting of "Brief Encounters"). The auditions, to which
Vyacheslav Shalevich,
Yuri Kamorny and
Yevgeny Zharikov were invited, became a formality, because the artists knew that the candidate for the title role had already been virtually chosen. At a meeting of the Art Council and the script editorial board, held on January 3, 1969, considered sketches and test recordings of the film. In the conclusion of the commission noted that among the applicants for the role of Bengalsky "the most favorable impression leaves actor V. Vysotsky. Similar loyalty to the unfinished picture was demonstrated at the "intermediate stages", so, during the study of working materials members of the commission noted that "particularly successful Vysotsky,
Kopelyan ... The material is reliable, has interesting camera work". The film was not saved from very harsh reviews by the press neither by the good atmosphere during the shooting nor by the support of
Anastas Mikoyan, who saw in the story of the protagonist of "Dangerous Journeys" elements of the biography of his comrade — the revolutionary
Maxim Litvinov. The film, which premiered on January 5, 1970, was criticized for its lighthearted attitude to serious events and the excess of scenes with
vaudeville and
can can; Vysotsky was accused of being "full of platitudes, not without success in imitating the significance of what is happening". The actor himself, speaking during performances about filming in the movie Yungvald-Khilkevich, said: "Despite the criticism, I warmly relate to this picture". Decades after "Dangerous Tours" appeared, reviewers remained divided. Elena Kuznetsova, for example, argued that Jungwald-Khilkevich's film was a loser compared to Gennady Poloka's picture, because the new artistic form that appeared in "Intervention" was not suitable for the idea of "Dangerous Tour", which eventually turned into "a kind of traditional example of
musical theatre.It is possible that the "reputation" of the film "Dangerous Tour" (the release of which coincided with the preparations for the
Lenin's centenary) was one of the reasons why Vysotsky, who by the end of the 1960s was in the creative baggage of a number of major film roles, was not accepted in March 1970 in the
Union of Cinematographers of the USSR. The repeated consideration of the issue was held at a meeting of the Board of the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR after the anniversary events, in July of the same year, and again ended with a refusal: "The question of admission to membership in the Union actor of the Taganka Theater V. S. Vysotsky to postpone for one year in connection with the facts of his indiscipline". The artist received a membership card of the Union of Cinematographers only in 1972.
Other roles In the second half of the 1960s, Vysotsky played several episodic roles, which passed the attention of the press. About one of the pictures —the comedy "Sasha, Little Sasha" (1966)— the actor spoke of as a "very bad movie", the creators of which he "by misunderstanding" passed his songs. Initially, the participation of Vladimir Semenovich in this tape was not planned, and director
Vitaly Chetverikov, sympathetic to the work of Vysotsky, especially for him added to the script a small role in the operetta artist. Work on "Sasha, Little Sasha" was hard, accompanied by reshoots and replacements of performers (at a certain point, instead of Valery Zolotukhin, who played the main male role, the site was invited to
Lev Prygunov), withdrawal of episodes and re-voicing. In the final version, Vysotsky's character, unmotivated and out of touch with the plot appeared in the cafeteria, sang in an alien voice the song "The front door hasn't been opened for a long time, / The boys have already broken the windows..." Vysotsky's last name was not mentioned in the credits. In 1967, Vysotsky appeared in Viktor Turov's film "War Under Roofs": the actor had a small role of a policeman at a wedding singing a song. At the meeting of the Art Council of "
Belarusfilm" the episode with the working title "Wedding" was recognized as "good, authentic", but not fitting into the overall picture: "The wedding is good, but what is it for in the film? There is a semantic charge, but there is no plot". As a result, the scene with Vysotsky was reduced to a minimum, and the actor appeared on screen in the crowd for only thirty seconds. == 1970s ==