
A love story of flesh and fire!
Ukraine, 16th century. While the Poles dominate the Cossack steppes, Andrei, son of Taras Bulba, a Cossack leader, must choose between his love for his family and his folk and his passion for a Polish woman.
- 6.3
- 1962
- Released
- 1h 59m

Tony Curtis
Andrei Bulba
Yul Brynner
Taras Bulba
Christine Kaufmann
Natalia Dubrov
Sam Wanamaker
Filipenko
Brad Dexter
Shilo
Guy Rolfe
Prince Grigory
Perry Lopez
Ostap Bulba
George Macready
The Governor
Ilka Windish
Sofia Bulba
Vladimir Sokoloff
Stepan Kanevsky
Vladimir Irman
Grisha Kubenko
Daniel Ocko
Ivan Mykola
Abraham Sofaer
The Abbot
Mickey Finn
Korzh
Richard Rust
Captain Alex
Ron Weyand
Tymoshevsky
Vitina Marcus
Gypsy Princess
Paul Frees
Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Chuck Hayward
Dolotov (uncredited)
Released
en
$7,000,000.00
$4,000,000.00
- #based on novel or book
- #cossack
- #poland
- #16th century
- #ottoman empire
- #father son relationship
- #brother brother relationship
- #ukraine
Reviews

This tale of the 16th century Cossack uprising against the Poles who had betrayed them years before is kicked off by a memorable, rousing theme from Franz Waxman. Unfortunately, it's largely downhill from here. Yul Brynner never looks comfortable in the title role. He has decided to fight the Poles on his own terms by sending his two sons to university in Kiev to learn their ways. His son "Andrei"

_**Cossacks vs. Poles on the steppes of Ukraine (actually Argentina)**_ In the 16th century, Cossacks on the Ukrainian steppe defy their subjugators, the Poles. Yul Brynner plays a hearty colonel while Tony Curtis plays his eldest son, who foolishly falls for a lovely princess in Kiev (Christine Kaufmann). "Taras Bulba" (1962) is based on the first half of the classic novella by Nikolai Go

Faith and a good Sabre arm. Taras Bulba is directed by J. Lee Thompson and adapted to the screen by Waldo Salt and Karl Tunberg from a story by Nikolai Gogol. It stars Yul Brynner, Tony Curtis, Christine Kaufmann and Perry Lopez. Out of United Artists, it's a DeLuxe/Eastman Color/Panavision production, with the music scored by Franz Waxman and cinematography by Joseph MacDonald. Loosely base











