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{{Mature}}
'''[[File:Lara Antipova y Viktor Komarovsky-0|thumb|right|335 px]]Viktor Komarovsky''' is the main antagonist in the 1957 Italian novel ''Doctor Zhivago'' by the late Boris Pasternak, and its 1965 film adaptation of the same name.
 
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{{Villain Infobox
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|image = Komarovsky.png
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|fullname = Viktor Komarovsky
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|origin = ''Doctor Zhivago''
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|occupation = Lawyer
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|skills = Manipulation
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|hobby = Going to fancy parties.<br>
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Playing poker.
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|goals = Have Lara Antipova all to himself <small>(initially failed then succeeded after Lara was in danger of execution)</small>.
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|crimes = Rape
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|type of villain = Rapist}} {{Quote|No doubt they'll sing in tune after the revolution|Viktor Komarovsky regarding the Russian protesters singing outside.}}
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'''Viktor Ippolitovich Komarovsky''' is the main antagonist in the 1957 Italian novel ''Doctor Zhivago'' by the late Boris Pasternak, and its 1965 film adaptation of the same name.
   
 
He was portrayed by the late Rod Steiger in the 1965 film adaptation.
 
He was portrayed by the late Rod Steiger in the 1965 film adaptation.
   
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Viktor Komarovsky is an unscrupulous businessman who played both sides of the Russian Revolution by having friends in the Russian Communist Party and the faction battling said communists for cotrol of Russia. He is implied to be a constant womanizer as he seduces the mother of army nurse Lara Antipova and later on eyes up Lara herself despite the fact that Lara is engaged to a young revolutionist named Pasha Antipov. She is then seduced by Komarovsky and continues to see him in secret.
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Viktor Komarovsky is an unscrupulous businessman who played both sides of the Russian Revolution by having friends in the Bolshevik Party and the Imperials. He is implied to be a constant womanizer as he seduces Amelia, the mother of Lara. Though portrayed as such, he, according to a rare 1958 interview with author Boris Pasternak, is the owner of a “small member”. Later, he eyes up Lara herself despite the fact that Lara is engaged to a young revolutionist named Pasha Antipov. She is then seduced by Komarovsky and continues to see him in secret (Amelia finds out and attempts to commit suicide by drinking iodine but is saved by Professor Boris Kurt and his protege Yuri Zhivago).
   
When Lara decided to end the relationship once and for all, Komarovsky rapes her and in retaliation Lara tracks him down to a Christmas Eve party and attempts to shoot him with a revolver Pasha gave her, but she only wounds his arm before she is escorted out of the building by Pasha as Yuri Zhivago, an aspiring poet turned doctor tends to his wound.
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When Lara decided to end the relationship once and for all, after Pasha Antipov declared his marriage for Lara, Komarovsky tries to reason with Lara that marrying Pasha would be a mistake, Lara ignores him so Komarovsky rapes her and in retaliation Lara tracks him down to a Christmas Eve party and attempts to shoot him with a revolver Pasha gave her, but she only wounds his arm before she is escorted out of the building by Pasha as Yuri Zhivago, tends to his wound.
   
After Yuri's family is deported to Paris and Pasha, under the name Strelinkov, is fighting in the Russian Revolution, Lara and Yuri rekindle their on-off relationship (which started as they worked together on the frontlines of WW1). During which Komarovsky informs them that they are being watched by the Cheka (All Russian Extrodinary Commission) due to Lara's connection to Strelinkov via marriage and Yuri's counter revolutionary poetry and desertion from communist partisans. He offers the couple help in leaving Russia but Lara and Yuri decline, instead choosing to hide in an abandoned Varykino estate.
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After Yuri's family is deported to Paris and Pasha, under the alias of the much feared Bolshevik commander [[Strelnikov]] , is fighting in the Russian Revolution, Lara and Yuri rekindle their on-off relationship (which started as they worked together on the frontlines of WW1). During which Komarovsky (now a Bolshevik)  informs them that thanks to Strelnikov being considered a liabitity to the Bolshevik cause they are being watched by the Cheka (Soviet secret police) due to Lara's connection to Strelnikov via marriage and Yuri's counter revolutionary poetry and desertion from [[Liberius|communist partisans]]. He offers the couple help in leaving Russia but Lara and Yuri decline, instead choosing to hide in an abandoned Varykino estate along with Lara's daughter, Katya.
   
Sometime later, Komarovsky reappears telling Yuri that Strelinkov was captured by the Cheka while returning to Lara and comitted suicide en route to execution, implying that Lara is in danger herself due to the Cheka only sparing her to draw Strelinkov out of hiding. Against his and Lara's will, Yuri sends Lara away with Komarovsky who had since been appointed a goverment official in the nominally independant Far Eastern Republic, while Yuri himself accepts his fate as he refuses to accompany a man that he strongly dislikes.
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Sometime later, Komarovsky reappears telling Yuri that Strelnikov was captured by the Bolsheviks while returning to Lara and comitted suicide en route to execution, implying that Lara is in danger herself due to the Bolsheviks only sparing her to draw Strelnikov out of hiding. Against his and Lara's will, Yuri sends Lara, and her daughter Katya, away with Komarovsky who had since been appointed a goverment official in the nominally independant Far Eastern Republic, while Yuri himself accepts his fate as he refuses to accompany a man that he strongly dislikes.
   
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It is unknown what happens afterwards although it is implied that Lara gave birth to a girl Yevgraf believes is Yuri's daughter Tanya (Yevgrav narrates the story to an older Tanya as he's searching for Yuri and Lara's child) and that Lara, Viktor and Tanya got separated during one of Stalin's purges (Komarovsky let go of Tanya's hand amist the chaos of the Civil War when it broke out in the Far East).
It is unknown whether Komarovsky was telling the truth about Strelinkov or if it was a ploy to get Lara back. Either way Lara seems disappointed to be reunited with Komarovsky.
 
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==Quotes==
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{{Quote|Larissa, I want to talk to you. (Lara: Monsieur Komarovsky, have you...?) I beg you, drop this affectation of addressing me as "Monsieur Komarovsky." Under the circumstances, I find it rather ridiculous. Lara, I am determined to save you from a dreadful error. There are two kinds of men, and only two. That young man is one kind. He is high-minded. He is pure. He's the kind of man the world pretends to look up to, and in fact despises. He is the kind of man who breeds unhappiness, particularly in women. Do you understand (Lara: No.) I think you do. There's another kind. Not high-minded. Not pure. But alive. That your tastes should incline towards the juvenile is understandable. But for you to marry that boy would be a disaster. Because there's two kinds of women. (Lara puts her hands over her ears, Komarovsky snatches them off) There are two kinds of women. And you, as we well know, are not the first kind. (Lara slaps Komarovsky, he slaps her back harder) You, my dear...are a slut. (Lara: I am not!) We'll see (Komarovsky violently rapes Lara. some time later Komarovsky starts to leave the room) And don't delude yourself this was rape. That would flatter us both.|Viktor Komarovsky explaining to Lara why Pasha isn't an ideal suitor for her.}}
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{{Quote|Pavel Pavlovich, my chief impression... and I mean no offense, is that you're very young. (Pasha: Monsieur, I hope I don't offend you. Do people improve with age?) They grow a little more tolerant. (Pasha: Because they have more to tolerate in themselves. If people don't marry young, what do they bring to their marriage?) A little experience. (Pasha: I'm 26. My mother died needlessly when I was 8. My father died in prison. I have fended for myself. I've worked my way through school and university. I am familiar with things that you can hardly guess at.) All this is an experience of a kind, certainly. (Pasha: I've no amorous experience, if that's what you mean. None whatever. Lara's 17. That speaks for itself. (Lara hangs her head in shame knowing that she isn't the virgin Pasha thinks she is.) (Pasha: You probably find this situation comic. We don't. We're going to be married next year. I hope I haven't offended you by speaking plainly.) Not at all.|Komarovsky questioning Pasha Antipov's experiences.}}
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==Trivia==
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•In a 1958 interview with Boris Pasternak, it was confirmed that Komarovsky has a “small member”. “While writing, it’s important to know the approximate [member size] of each of your male characters… and [Viktor Komarovsky], in my mind, is in possession of a member of the smallest order,” says Pasternak of his famous antagonist.
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[[Category:Opportunists]]
 
[[Category:Rapists]]
 
[[Category:Flashback Villains]]
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[[Category:Book Villains]]
 
[[Category:Movie Villains]]
 
[[Category:Movie Villains]]
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[[Category:Live Action Villains]]
 
[[Category:Corrupt Officials]]
 
[[Category:Corrupt Officials]]
 
[[Category:Oppressors]]
 
[[Category:Oppressors]]
[[Category:Opportunists]]
 
[[Category:Rapists]]
 
 
[[Category:Businessmen]]
 
[[Category:Businessmen]]
 
[[Category:Karma Houdini]]
 
[[Category:Karma Houdini]]
[[Category:Love rivals]]
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[[Category:Love Rivals]]
 
[[Category:Hero's Lover]]
 
[[Category:Hero's Lover]]
 
[[Category:Wealthy]]
 
[[Category:Wealthy]]
 
[[Category:Male]]
 
[[Category:Male]]
 
[[Category:Elderly]]
 
[[Category:Elderly]]
[[Category:Epic Film Villains]]
 

Revision as of 03:00, 30 October 2021

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No doubt they'll sing in tune after the revolution
~ Viktor Komarovsky regarding the Russian protesters singing outside.

Viktor Ippolitovich Komarovsky is the main antagonist in the 1957 Italian novel Doctor Zhivago by the late Boris Pasternak, and its 1965 film adaptation of the same name.

He was portrayed by the late Rod Steiger in the 1965 film adaptation.

Biography

Viktor Komarovsky is an unscrupulous businessman who played both sides of the Russian Revolution by having friends in the Bolshevik Party and the Imperials. He is implied to be a constant womanizer as he seduces Amelia, the mother of Lara. Though portrayed as such, he, according to a rare 1958 interview with author Boris Pasternak, is the owner of a “small member”. Later, he eyes up Lara herself despite the fact that Lara is engaged to a young revolutionist named Pasha Antipov. She is then seduced by Komarovsky and continues to see him in secret (Amelia finds out and attempts to commit suicide by drinking iodine but is saved by Professor Boris Kurt and his protege Yuri Zhivago).

When Lara decided to end the relationship once and for all, after Pasha Antipov declared his marriage for Lara, Komarovsky tries to reason with Lara that marrying Pasha would be a mistake, Lara ignores him so Komarovsky rapes her and in retaliation Lara tracks him down to a Christmas Eve party and attempts to shoot him with a revolver Pasha gave her, but she only wounds his arm before she is escorted out of the building by Pasha as Yuri Zhivago, tends to his wound.

After Yuri's family is deported to Paris and Pasha, under the alias of the much feared Bolshevik commander Strelnikov , is fighting in the Russian Revolution, Lara and Yuri rekindle their on-off relationship (which started as they worked together on the frontlines of WW1). During which Komarovsky (now a Bolshevik)  informs them that thanks to Strelnikov being considered a liabitity to the Bolshevik cause they are being watched by the Cheka (Soviet secret police) due to Lara's connection to Strelnikov via marriage and Yuri's counter revolutionary poetry and desertion from communist partisans. He offers the couple help in leaving Russia but Lara and Yuri decline, instead choosing to hide in an abandoned Varykino estate along with Lara's daughter, Katya.

Sometime later, Komarovsky reappears telling Yuri that Strelnikov was captured by the Bolsheviks while returning to Lara and comitted suicide en route to execution, implying that Lara is in danger herself due to the Bolsheviks only sparing her to draw Strelnikov out of hiding. Against his and Lara's will, Yuri sends Lara, and her daughter Katya, away with Komarovsky who had since been appointed a goverment official in the nominally independant Far Eastern Republic, while Yuri himself accepts his fate as he refuses to accompany a man that he strongly dislikes.

It is unknown what happens afterwards although it is implied that Lara gave birth to a girl Yevgraf believes is Yuri's daughter Tanya (Yevgrav narrates the story to an older Tanya as he's searching for Yuri and Lara's child) and that Lara, Viktor and Tanya got separated during one of Stalin's purges (Komarovsky let go of Tanya's hand amist the chaos of the Civil War when it broke out in the Far East).

Quotes

Larissa, I want to talk to you. (Lara: Monsieur Komarovsky, have you...?) I beg you, drop this affectation of addressing me as "Monsieur Komarovsky." Under the circumstances, I find it rather ridiculous. Lara, I am determined to save you from a dreadful error. There are two kinds of men, and only two. That young man is one kind. He is high-minded. He is pure. He's the kind of man the world pretends to look up to, and in fact despises. He is the kind of man who breeds unhappiness, particularly in women. Do you understand (Lara: No.) I think you do. There's another kind. Not high-minded. Not pure. But alive. That your tastes should incline towards the juvenile is understandable. But for you to marry that boy would be a disaster. Because there's two kinds of women. (Lara puts her hands over her ears, Komarovsky snatches them off) There are two kinds of women. And you, as we well know, are not the first kind. (Lara slaps Komarovsky, he slaps her back harder) You, my dear...are a slut. (Lara: I am not!) We'll see (Komarovsky violently rapes Lara. some time later Komarovsky starts to leave the room) And don't delude yourself this was rape. That would flatter us both.
~ Viktor Komarovsky explaining to Lara why Pasha isn't an ideal suitor for her.
Pavel Pavlovich, my chief impression... and I mean no offense, is that you're very young. (Pasha: Monsieur, I hope I don't offend you. Do people improve with age?) They grow a little more tolerant. (Pasha: Because they have more to tolerate in themselves. If people don't marry young, what do they bring to their marriage?) A little experience. (Pasha: I'm 26. My mother died needlessly when I was 8. My father died in prison. I have fended for myself. I've worked my way through school and university. I am familiar with things that you can hardly guess at.) All this is an experience of a kind, certainly. (Pasha: I've no amorous experience, if that's what you mean. None whatever. Lara's 17. That speaks for itself. (Lara hangs her head in shame knowing that she isn't the virgin Pasha thinks she is.) (Pasha: You probably find this situation comic. We don't. We're going to be married next year. I hope I haven't offended you by speaking plainly.) Not at all.
~ Komarovsky questioning Pasha Antipov's experiences.

Trivia

•In a 1958 interview with Boris Pasternak, it was confirmed that Komarovsky has a “small member”. “While writing, it’s important to know the approximate [member size] of each of your male characters… and [Viktor Komarovsky], in my mind, is in possession of a member of the smallest order,” says Pasternak of his famous antagonist.