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  1. At a cost of 8.29 million Rbls – equal to US$ 9.21 million at 1967 rates, or $600–700 million in 2019, accounting for rouble inflation – it was the most expensive film made in the Soviet Union. Upon its release, it became a success with audiences, selling approximately 135 million tickets in the USSR.

  2. Feb 15, 2019 · The adaptation set a new standard for “epic,” capturing all the passion and tragedy of Napoleon’s clash against the Russian aristocracy in its seven-hour sprawl. Anyone who hears “431 ...

  3. On 3 April 1961, Vladimir Surin, the director-general of the Mosfilm studios, sent Furtseva a letter requesting to approve the adaptation of a script for a film in three parts based on War and Peace, as well as to allocate 150,000 Soviet ruble in funds.

  4. Feb 15, 2019 · Because of shifting exchange rates and inexact data, War and Peace ’s final price tag has never been fully determined; estimates have ranged from anywhere between $200 million to $700...

    • Movie Critic
  5. By January 1957, War and Peace had earned $6.25 million in box office rentals from the United States and Canada. [6] De Laurentiis felt that Paramount improperly handled distribution and that it should have made two or three times as much.

  6. Feb 12, 2019 · A seven-hour-plus adaptation of Leo Tolstoy’s classic doorstopper, Bondarchuk’s film was by far the costliest production in the history of the Soviet Union, and it certainly looks it.

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  8. By now the statistics regarding “War and Peace” are well known, but forgive me if I recite them with a certain relish anyway: the film was five years in the making at a cost of $100,000,000, with a cast of 120,000, all clothed in authentic uniforms, and the Red Army was mobilized to recreate Napoleon’s battles exactly (it is claimed) as ...

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