Mera spored Mera, "1901-1902", episode 1-2 . Measure for Measure

Duration: 02:58:00 The movie is divided into three parts for a little breather between "acts." This epic production was created as a part of the 1981 celebration of 1300 years of Bulgarian statehood. Part I deals with the years between 1878 and 1903, as growing militancy first leads to the...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Dyulgerov, Georgi
Institution:Open Society Archives at Central European University
Language:Bulgarian
Published: Savremennik at Boyana Film Studio 1981
Bulgaria
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:028721c9-98d7-40f8-bcae-9979526237b0
Description
Summary:Duration: 02:58:00 The movie is divided into three parts for a little breather between "acts." This epic production was created as a part of the 1981 celebration of 1300 years of Bulgarian statehood. Part I deals with the years between 1878 and 1903, as growing militancy first leads to the liberation of most of Bulgaria from the Ottoman Turks (1878), and then to a struggle to free the western segment of the nation as well (1903). Part II (1903-1906) covers the early battles for this western segment, and Part III (1906-1912), full liberation from the Turks. With a view to presenting his story in dramatic, human terms, Dyulgerov chose to focus on one character above all others, a young shepherd who undergoes a transformation that is in step with the times around him, and embodies all of the ideals, problems, and sorrows of this war for independence. The shepherd is a Macedonian, and the western segment of Bulgaria that was still under Turkish control after 1878 is, in fact, a part of a greater Macedonia that came to be divided between Greece, Yugoslavia, and eventually, Bulgaria. In the late 19th century, the hero Dilber Tanas (Roussi Chanev) is an ignorant shepherd who like everyone else around him, has no real view of the larger, revolutionary issues. When a bandit leader decides that it is time for the men in the area to marry, Dilber suddenly finds himself about to be wed when someone shoves a rifle into his hands and he becomes so undone that he accidentally shoots the marrying orthodox priest. This, of course, leads to stiff punishment - he is thrown into a quarry where after fervent prayers for his salvation, he gets out - a new man, and a revolutionary. Like it or not, he is caught up in the fighting against the Turks, sparked by the uprising at Ilinden on August 2, 1903. In Part II, Dilber and his compatriots are facing extinction as the Ottoman Turks burn and pillage, killing everyone in their path. Fate in the form of Kemal Ataturk (future president of Turkey) ends this situation when he revolts against the Turkish government and enlists the aid of the Turkish army in Macedonia - and some Macedonians - in his struggle.
Published:1981