Nobel Prize winner, Aleksander Solzhenitsyn's speech which he was not allowed to deliver.
      
            In 1970 Solzhenitsyn was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. This film illustrates this lecture which he wrote before his expulsion from the Soviet Union. With music by Shostakovich, prison-camps sequences, works of art, and historic newsreel footage, the film, narrated by Tom Courtenay, dramatizes contemporary issues such as the differing scales of values in the world, the link between violence and lies, the relevance and power of art and literature, and the crucial role of the individual.
Film language
                    Czech
Original title
                      
                    Film length
                    
                          27 min
                        
                      Film type
                      
                    Production company
                    
                          Anglo-Nordic Productions Trust
                        
                      Location of copies of DVD/Video
                      
                    Copyright holder
                    
                  Publishing permission
                      
                      Publishing permission refers to the rights of FANW to publish the full video content of this film on this website.