USSR

  • Sergei M. Eisenstein – Bronenosets Potyomkin aka Battleship Potemkin (1925) (HD)

    1921-1930ClassicsSergei M. EisensteinSilentUSSR

    Marie Seton wrote:
    When he made Potemkin in 1925, Sergei Eisenstein was not only a man with his total personality dedicated to creative work — albeit a creative work aimed at destroying all orthodox concepts of ‘art’ — but he was also a revolutionary fighter, a propagandist for the Russian Revolution. Thus, his work had a utilitarian purpose as well as an artistic one. He was educator and artist. At its most obvious level, Potemkin was regarded as propaganda for the Revolution; at a deeper level it was a highly complex work of art which Eisenstein thought would affect every man who beheld it, from the humblest to the most learned.Read More »

  • Yuriy Norshteyn – Skazka skazok aka Tale of Tales (1979)

    1971-1980AnimationUSSRYuriy Norshteyn

    Quote:
    The name Tale of Tales came from a poem of the same name by Turkish poet Nazım Hikmet that Norshteyn loved since 1962.Read More »

  • Aleksandr Medvedkin – Kinopoezd – Cinetrain (1933-35)

    1931-1940Aleksandr MedvedkinDocumentarySilentUSSR

    As Chris Marker’s fans already know, Kinopoezd was a project by Alexandr Medvedkin, Soviet filmmaker and though he isn’t mentioned in the titles, he was a main locomotive in this crazy journey.
    Train was full of with film prints, editing tables, actors and it traveled through Soviet Union, films were made in one day, edited at night and very next day shown to the people, who participated in it, as Marker says.Read More »

  • Yevgeni Bauer – Posle smerti AKA After Death (1915)

    1911-1920DramaSilentThe Birth of CinemaUSSRYevgeni Bauer

    Posle Smerti [After Death]
    A titan of the early Russian cinema, Evgenii Bauer was born in Russia in 1865. His father was a renowned zither-player, while his sisters became actresses. Bauer graduated from the Moscow Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. Over the years, he was an amateur actor, a caricaturist for magazines, a newspaper satirist, a theatrical impresario, and an artistic photographer. He was especially recognized for designing sets for theatrical productions, a talent that eventually brought him into the cinema when he designed the sets for Drankov and Taldykin’s commemorative historical film, Trekhsotletie Tsarstvovaniya Doma Romanovykh (The Tercentenary of the Rule of the Romanov Dynasty), released in 1913. Encouraged by Drankov and Taldykin, Bauer, then 48 years of age, graduated to directing for their company. Read More »

  • Aleksandr Proshkin – Mikhaylo Lomonosov (1986)

    Drama1981-1990Aleksandr ProshkinEpicUSSR
    kinopoisk.ru

    The strength of mind of Mikhailo Lomonosov was comparable only to that of the Russian Spirit itself. An amazing mixture of natural (rather than ancestral) nobility, overwhelming intellect, sense of the beauty, humour, kind heart, and a total dedication, self sacrifice to the most deserving ideals, would make any true Russian, including Peter the Great, the most proud for the land that gave birth to this unimaginably capable human being. And the film brings out this point to you, not only using great talent of the inspired actors and director, but also by quoting historical facts and documents, and precisely reproducing events, scenes and even emotions. Read More »

  • Boris Barnet – Alyonka (1961)

    1961-1970Boris BarnetComedyUSSR

    Quote:
    Kazakhstan, the 50s. The main heroine of the film is a nine-year-old girl Alyonka, who is sent to town by her parents to study. The girl meets various companions on her long way. Some of them are telling about the story of their settlement or their attempt to settle in this Far East.Read More »

  • Larisa Shepitko – Znoy (1963)

    1961-1970ArthouseDramaLarisa ShepitkoUSSR

    Quote:
    Heat was Shepitko’s diploma feature, her extraordinary talent underlined by its unprecedented success, winning prizes at the Leningrad and Karlovy Vary Film Festivals. It was also made in gruelling conditions on the barren steppes, the young director falling ill and having to direct from a stretcher. The story fuses serious political drama and cowboy showdown as an idealistic high school graduate goes to work on a state farm, only to clash with its authoritarian, Stalinist leader.Read More »

  • Aleksey German – Moy drug Ivan Lapshin AKA My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985)

    1981-1990Aleksey GermanDramaUSSR

    Quote:
    Aleksei German’s singular, multithreaded drama My Friend Ivan Lapshin offers a uniquely stylized look at life in Russia as the flaws of Communism were just beginning to show. Set in a provincial Russian village during the 1930s, the film at times recalls the autobiographical work of Terence Davies or Woody Allen’s Radio Days. Like the work of those directors, German’s film filters most experiences through the eyes of a child, although the child/narrator in this particular movie is not present in the majority of the scenes. Read More »

  • Stanislav Govorukhin – Desyat negrityat AKA Ten Little Indians (1987)

    1981-1990CampMysteryStanislav GovorukhinUSSR

    A psychological thriller based on the novel by Agatha Christie. Ten strangers are forced to come face to face with their dark pasts after receiving invitation to an isolated island off the coast of England.Read More »

Back to top button