Sergei BonÂdarchuk directÂed an 8‑hour film adapÂtaÂtion of War and Peace (1966–67), which endÂed up winÂning an Oscar for Best ForÂeign PicÂture. When he was in Los AngeÂles as a guest of honÂor at a parÂty, HolÂlyÂwood royÂalÂty like John Wayne, John Ford, and BilÂly Wilder lined up to meet the RussÂian filmÂmakÂer. But the only perÂson that BonÂdarchuk was truÂly excitÂed to meet was Ray BradÂbury. BonÂdarchuk introÂduced the author to the crowd of bemused A‑listers as “your greatÂest genius, your greatÂest writer!”
Ray BradÂbury spent a lifeÂtime craftÂing stoÂries about robots, MarÂtians, space travÂel and nuclear doom and, in the process, turned the forÂmerÂly disÂrepÂutable genre of Sci-Fi/ÂFanÂtaÂsy into someÂthing respectable. He influÂenced legions of writÂers and filmÂmakÂers on both sides of the Atlantic from Stephen King to Neil Gaiman to FranÂcois TrufÂfaut, who adaptÂed his most famous novÂel, FahrenÂheit 451, into a movie.
That film wasn’t the only adapÂtaÂtion of Bradbury’s work, of course. His writÂings have been turned into feaÂture films, TV movies, radio shows and even a video game for the ComÂmodore 64. DurÂing the wanÂing days of the Cold War, a handÂful of SoviÂet aniÂmaÂtors demonÂstratÂed their esteem for the author by adaptÂing his short stoÂries.
Vladimir SamÂsonov directÂed Bradbury’s Here There Be Tygers, which you can see above. A spaceÂship lands on an Eden-like planÂet. The humans inside are on a misÂsion to extract all the natÂurÂal resources posÂsiÂble from the planÂet, but they quickÂly realÂize that this isn’t your ordiÂnary rock. “This planÂet is alive,” declares one of the charÂacÂters. Indeed, not only is it alive but it also has the abilÂiÂty to grant wishÂes. Want to fly? Fine. Want to make streams flow with wine? Sure. Want to sumÂmon a nubile maidÂen from the earth? No probÂlem. EveryÂone seems enchantÂed by the planÂet except one dark-heartÂed jerk who seems hell-bent on comÂpletÂing the misÂsion.
Samsonov’s movie is stylÂized, spooky and rather beauÂtiÂful – a bit like as if Andrei Tarkovsky had directÂed Avatar.
AnothÂer one of Bradbury’s shorts, There Will Come Soft Rain, has been adaptÂed by Uzbek direcÂtor NazÂim TyuhÂladziev (also spelled NozÂim To’laho’jayev). The stoÂry is about an autoÂmatÂed house that conÂtinÂues to cook and clean for a famÂiÂly of four unaware that they all perÂished in a nuclear exploÂsion. While Bradbury’s verÂsion works as a comÂment on both AmerÂiÂcan conÂsumerism and genÂerÂal Cold War dread, Tyuhladziev’s verÂsion goes for a more reliÂgious tact. The robot that runs the house looks like a mechanÂiÂcal snake (GarÂden of Eden, anyÂone?). The robot and the house become undone by an errant white dove. The aniÂmaÂtion might not have the polÂish of a DisÂney movie, but it is surÂprisÂingÂly creepy and poignant.
Note: An earÂliÂer verÂsion of this post appeared on our site in 2014.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Enjoy 15+ Hours of the Weird and WonÂderÂful World of Post SoviÂet RussÂian AniÂmaÂtion
Jonathan Crow is a Los AngeÂles-based writer and filmÂmakÂer whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The HolÂlyÂwood Reporter, and othÂer pubÂliÂcaÂtions. You can folÂlow him at @jonccrow.
BeauÂtiÂful, thankyÂou