Grigory Vakulinchuk
Aleksandr Antonov
Grigory Vakulinchuk

“Revolution is the only lawful, equal, effectual war. It was in Russia that this war was declared and begun.”
A dramatized account of a great Russian naval mutiny and a resultant public demonstration, showing support, which brought on a police massacre.
2025 UK Re-release Trailer | Music by Pet Shop Boys Official
Grigory Vakulinchuk
Aleksandr Antonov
Grigory Vakulinchuk
Commander Golikov
Vladimir Barsky
Commander Golikov
Chief Officer Giliarovsky
Grigori Aleksandrov
Chief Officer Giliarovsky
Young Sailor Flogged While Sleeping
Ivan Bobrov
Young Sailor Flogged While Sleeping
Militant Sailor
Mikhail Gomorov
Militant Sailor
Petty Officer
Aleksandr Levshin
Petty Officer
Woman with Pince-nez
Nina Poltavtseva
Woman with Pince-nez
Student Agitator
Konstantin Feldman
Student Agitator
Mother Carrying Wounded Boy
Prokhorenko
Mother Carrying Wounded Boy
Wounded Boy
A. Glauberman
Wounded Boy
Woman with Baby Carriage
Beatrice Vitoldi
Woman with Baby Carriage
Sailor
Danylo Antonovych
Sailor
I'm not going to attempt to find loads of cinematic superlatives about this. It's just a great film that depicts the epitome of cruelty, indifference and kindred spirit at sea in spades. The crew of this powerful warship are treated little better than prisoners in a gulag. When the ship's doctor insists that their daily meat ration (which could "jump into the water by itself") is safe to eat, a few of them decide to take a stance. Their officer humiliates them, and when they refuse to back down he corners them on deck and orders them shot. This proves the flashpoint for his crewmen who proceed to seize the ship and sail to Odessa where they turn the guns on the army headquarters in the city and the conflagration grows. Will others join them, or will the status quo be returned and their ship destroyed...? Historians have already told us the answers to most of the factual questions, so it's not really about what happens - it is the magnificently poignant and suspenseful fashion in which Eisenstein paces the film. Clearly he has an agenda, his depictions are not exactly even handed - particularly the soldiers in the town dealing with the civilian population, but that doesn't overwhelm the overall sentiment of the sailors rebelling for just reasons, for decent treatment and for a degree of respect that was certainly lacking from their officers. The production itself is superb, the camerawork has an intensity that makes you feel as if you are actually on the boat at times. I'm sure there are more analytical reviews of this film to be had - but I think it is just a wonderful example of a man at the top of his game making an exciting film that delivers entertainment and a bit of thought-provocation in equal measure, at the same time.
Read full reviewNeil Tennant on It Couldn't Happen Here and Battleship Potemkin | BFI Q&A
Mark Kermode reviews Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin (1925) | BFI Player
More movies you might want to watch next.