Diabolik

Color, 1970, 83 mins. 34 secs.
Directed by Vladimir Moty
Starring Anatoliy Kuznetsov, Kakhi Kavsadze, Spartak Mishulin
Deaf Crocodile (Blu-ray) (US RA HD), Krupnyy Plan (Blu-ray & DVD) (Russia R0 HD/NTSC), PolarFilm (DVD) (Germany R0 PAL), Ruscico (DVD) (Russia R0 NTSC)


While the spaghetti White Sun of the Desertwestern was invigorating the genre around the world throughout the later '60s and early '70s, Soviet cinema had its own White Sun of the Desertfascinating variation with the far less exported Ostern, westerns set in Russia usually during times of combat. A few of these managed to cross over to American home video on DVD from Ruscico back at the format's height with titles like The Elusive Avengers (the one that really kicked things off in 1966) and At Home Among Strangers, and in 2026 Deaf Crocodile entered the fray with a Blu-ray release of one of the most popular of them all, 1970's White Sun of the Desert.

Trekking home for months through the desert along the Caspian Sea, Civil War soldier Fyodor Sukhov (Kuznetsov) only dreams of getting home to his wife, Katerina. He comes across and saves farmer Sayid (Mishulin), who has been buried up to his neck by the cowardly and evil Dzhavdet who killed his father. On and off their paths run parallel as they try to avoid but end up repeatedly tangling with the forces of the White Sun of the Desertruthless Black Abdullah (Kavsadze), who has shot and abandoned his harem nearby at a dilapidated museum feeling they would drag him down. The women shed their coverings and, thanks to a fortuitous discovery of a cache of dynamite, a wild, White Sun of the Desertbullet-strewn adventure ensues involving our ragtag heroes, a nearby cavalry, and Abdullah's path of destruction.

With its oddball sense of humor and epic battle scenes, it's easy to see this as a Soviet counterpart to Sergio Leone but with its own unique personality and visual style. It's easy to see why this resonated with local audiences as well, inspiring everything from video games to public statues, since it manages to pack in a satisfying amount of action into its relatively short running time while maintaining an oddly whimsical tone. The stunning landscape photography is a huge plus as well, and while you'd have to speak Russian to get the full flavor of its now-legendary dialogue, the characters are memorable and worthy of investing in their journey.

Initially released on DVD by White Sun of the DesertRuscico back in the early '00s but not part of that label's import slate for the U.S. via Image Entertainment, this film has largely flown under the radar for American audiences until the Blu-ray release available in standard or the usual luxurious deluxe editions. The latter as usual is quite the work of art unto itself featuring a slipcase designed by Steven Thomas White Sun of the Desertand appreciative essays in the heavily illustrated 60-page book, "How a Cult Classic Was Born" by Peter Rollberg and an untitled one by Walter Chaw, outlining the film's turbulent path to completion and massive cult status, the fortunate shift in leadership that favored the release of a local western, and the ideology at play including its proto-feminist aspects. The transfer itself looks and sounds gorgeous with the vistas and uniforms looking pin-sharp here with nice color, and the optional English subtitles are solid. Rolf Giesen provides a new audio commentary covering the film's production history and significant pop culture impact to this day, with tidbits along the way like attempts to hire Tarkovsky to direct this. (The mind boggles.) A new interview with "expert on Russian Red Westerns"
author (which sounds like a fun specialty) Sergey Lavrentyev (58m53s) with the label's Dennis Bartok outlines the different strains of this subgenre which can be set in Russian Asia, the U.S., or Communist-controlled countries of the era, and the visual essay "The Revolution Has Set You Free" (16m1s) by Evan Chester dives more precisely into this film's background and the elements that resonated so strongly with the populace. A new restoration trailer is also included.

Reviewed on April 12, 2026