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Love and Death

Love and Death

  • Status: Released
  • 10-06-1975
  • Runtime: 85 min
  • Score: 7.488
  • Vote count: 936

In czarist Russia, a neurotic soldier and his distant cousin formulate a plot to assassinate Napoleon.

Woody Allen

Boris Grushenko

Diane Keaton

Sonja

Harold Gould

Anton Inbedkov

Olga Georges-Picot

Countess Alexandrovna

Zvee Scooler

Father

Despo Diamantidou

Mother

Sol Frieder

Voskovec

Jessica Harper

Natasha

Lloyd Battista

Don Francisco

Alfred Lutter

Young Boris

Georges Adet

Old Nehamkin

Frank Adu

Drill Sergeant

Edmond Ardisson

Priest

Féodor Atkine

Mikhail

Albert Augier

Waiter

Yves Barsacq

Rimsky

Jack Bérard

General Lecoq

Eva Betrand

Woman Hygiene Class

George Birt

Doctor

Yves Brainville

Andre

Gérard Buhr

Servant

Brian Coburn

Dimitri

Henri Coutet

Minskov

Patricia Crown

Cheerleader

Henri Czarniak

Ivan

Sandor Elès

Soldier 2

Luce Fabiole

Grandmother

Florian

Uncle Nikolai

Jacqueline Fogt

Ludmilla

Harry Hankin

Uncle Sasha

Tony Jay

Vladimir Maximovitch

Tutte Lemkow

Pierre

Jack Lenoir

Krapotkin

Leib Lensky

Father Andre

Anne Lonnberg

Olga

Roger Lumont

1st Baker

Edward Marcus

Raskov

Jacques Maury

Second

Narcissa McKinley

Cheerleader

Aubrey Morris

Soldier 4

Denise Péron

Spanish Countess

Beth Porter

Anna

Alan Rossett

Guard

Shimen Ruskin

Borslov

Percival Russel

Berdykov

Chris Sanders

Joseph

C.A.R. Smith

Father Nikolai

Fred Smith

Soldier

Clément Thierry

Jacques

Alan Tilvern

Sergeant

James Tolkan

Napoleon

Hélène Vallier

Madame Wolfe

Howard Vernon

General Leveque

Glenn Williams

Soldier 1

Jacob Witkin

Sushkin

Bernard Taylor

Soldier 3

Rebecca Potok

Woman (uncredited)

Norman Rose

Death (voice) (uncredited)

Andrée Tainsy

Woman (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

All this really needed was someone like Emil Jannings to add a bit of imperialist, silent-film, gravitas to proceedings as a pair of slightly self-obsessed intellectual ne’er-do-wells get caught up in the Franco-Russian war. Unfortunately for the Czar, with Napoleon clamouring at his borders, he must rely on the likes of the neurotic and yellow-bellied “Boris” (has to be Woody Allen, doesn’t it?) to enlist in his army. He is about as much use as that wrong calibre stuff they had in the Crimea, but he determines that his best plan for a swift exit back to his equally up-herself cousin “Sonja” (Diane Keaton) is to assassinate the Frenchman and end the war in one stroke. Meantime, his manipulative cousin is safely at home playing a cat and mouse game with his brother “Ivan” (Henri Czarniak) who isn’t remotely interested in returning her amorous intentions. Regardless, she isn’t going to let his disinterest save her from an unwanted marriage with “Boris”. His hapless army skills just happen to coincide with historical fact and so when the French arrive in a largely abandoned Moscow, the pair have a chance to reunite and whilst dodging the bullets they are metaphorically shooting at each other, unite to achieve their murderous goal. Fans of Tolstoy and/or Dostoevsky will see plenty of similarities, parodies even, of their more earnest tales of revolution, grand philosophising and unrequited love and for much of the time these references are only very thinly veiled, if at all! It is also an out-and-out comedy with more than an few shades of the bawdiness of a “Carry On” movie peppered with a few double-entendres and the humour comes thick and fast amongst all the fake blood and fabulous examples of the costumiers art. Of course, like most daft comedies there is a twist and this one comes from left field and entirely tops off this enjoyable romp through history - or literature’s interpretation thereof, and is one of my favourite Woody Allen scripts as it levels just about everything from religiosity to pomposity before it. Good fun.