[lbo-talk] Bulgakov's cult novel glues Russians to TV

uvj at vsnl.com uvj at vsnl.com
Tue Jan 3 15:09:57 PST 2006


The Asian Age http://www.asianage.com/

30 December 2005

Bottomline

Bulgakov's cult novel glues Russians to TV

- By Maria Danilova

Moscow, Dec. 29: While all around the world Christians are celebrating the birth of Christ this season, Russians are more preoccupied with Satan.


>From taxi drivers to doctors, millions of Russians have been glued to TV
screens for the past two weeks watching the country's first adaptation of The Master and Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov's cult novel exploring whether the world is ruled by good or evil.

Viewer surveys showed that more than 55 per cent of Russians over 18 watched the first episode of The Master and Margarita on Dec. 19 after a heavy advertising campaign on television and street billboards. The series ends on Friday.

Combining bitter satire, wild fantasy and eternal philosophical questions, The Master and Margarita weaves together three plot lines: The devil and his entourage wreaking havoc in dictator Josef Stalin's Moscow of the 1930s; the betrayal and crucifixion of Jesus Christ; and the struggle of two passionate lovers, separated by society, to reunite.

The devil, embodied by a mysterious foreign professor named Woland, mocks vehemently atheist Soviets for their unbelief, punishes greedy and corrupt officials and lures Margarita, a fine Moscow lady, into becoming a witch for the sake of saving her beloved, the master, a gifted writer driven to despair by Soviet censors.

The surreal scenes brought to the screen include an obese black cat from the devil's retinue riding a tram and toasting with vodka, Moscow women running around in their underwear and a naked Margarita hovering above the city on a broom on her way to attend a ball hosted by Satan. The ball scene is said to have been inspired by a famous reception at the US ambassador's residence in Moscow in the 1930s.

The novel, which Bulgakov finished on his deathbed, was banned for 26 years until a government-edited version was first published in a literary magazine in 1966 following Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev's era of relative openness. Vladimir Bortko, director of the 10-series movie broadcast on Rossiya state television, said the book embodies freedom for Russians. (AP)



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