Doctor Zhivago (novel)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Doctor Zhivago
Original Title: До́ктор Жива́го
Written by: Boris Pasternak
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Genre(s): Historical fiction, Romance
First published: 1957
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Doctor Zhivago is a 1957 novel which got its author (Boris Pasternak) a Nobel Prize. That he was forced to reject by the Soviet government. It is one of the most famous works of Russian Literature, worth mentioning in the same breath as War and Peace, Crime and Punishment and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.

A tale of lost love that takes in World War I, the Russian Revolutions and the Russian Civil War, it has been adapted several times, including in Russia itself.

The most famous film adaptation is Doctor Zhivago (1965), David Lean's followup to Lawrence of Arabia starring Omar Sharif and Julie Christie, best known for its epic scope, and for the world famous "Lara's Theme". The film was praised for its visual style that was a calling card for its director David Lean. It also features Rod Steiger as Komarovsky.

It was adapted again into a 2002 two-part PBS Masterpiece Theatre presentation, which added an extra hour to the movie's run time, making it roughly four hours total. They decided to use the time to add in more characters, move some people around in terms of plot, make it grittier and add in some longer sex scenes which would not have been cool for a 1965 movie. Starring Keira Knightley and Hans Matheson, it also featured Sam Neil as Komarovsky, making him an even bigger Magnificent Bastard than any other onscreen adaptation yet.

Doctor Zhivago has also been adapted into a stage musical, premiering in Sydney, Australia in 2011.

The Other Wiki tells us that it "has been part of the Russian school curriculum since 2003, where it is read in 11th grade."


Tropes used in Doctor Zhivago (novel) include: