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Russia In Revolt [VHS] [1924]
 
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Russia In Revolt [VHS] [1924]

VHS ~ Alexander Antonov
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Actors: Alexander Antonov, Vladimir Barsky, Grigori Alexandrov, Mikhail Gomorov, Boris Livanov
  • Directors: Sergei Eisenstein, Esfir Shub
  • Format: Box set, Black & White, PAL, Subtitled
  • Language Russian
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Eureka Entertainment
  • VHS Release Date: 22 April 2002
  • Run Time: 360 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • ASIN: B000063KI0
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 32,222 in Video (See Bestsellers in Video)

    Popular in these categories:

    #5 in  Video > Classic Films > International > 1920s
    #8 in  Video > World Cinema > Directors > Eisenstein, M Sergei
    #9 in  Video > Classic Films > Directors > Eisenstein, Sergei

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

No revolution has been portrayed on screen more vividly than that in St Petersburg (aka Petrograd) during October 1917, and if what we see in Russia in Revolt is not the truth as it happened, this box set confirms that fiction can be much more potent than fact. Sergei Eisenstein came of age as a director during this period, putting his innovations into practice and redefining history in the process.

Strike (1924) was Eisenstein's first film. Its combination of physical impact and studio experimentation is still impressive, and if the abundance of symbolic images leads to visual overload, the feeling of a "them-against-us" confrontation still packs its punch.

The Battleship Potemkin (1925) refines Eisenstein's thinking in 73 minutes of heightened realism that, as late as 1958, was still considered the finest film ever made. The 1905 Potemkin mutiny, the murder of sailor Vakulinchuk, the massacre on the Odessa steps, the triumphal return of the ship to port--these images made history as surely as if they were the real thing. A scrolling synopsis sets the scene, and extracts from Dmitry Shostakovich's symphonies heighten tension.

October 1917 (1928), also known as "10 Days that Shook the World", charts the period leading from the Czar's abdication, through the months of indecisive Provisional Government to the Bolshevik storming of the Winter Palace. Eisenstein takes montage technique to new limits, as images of individuals and institutions overwhelm the viewer. The scrolling background story details events as they really were, and Shostakovich's music again sets the scene.

Dating from 1927 Esfir Shub's The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty documentary uses archive footage from the Romanov tercentenary in 1913 to the Bolshevik takeover four years on. Here truth really is fashioned into myth. The musical score consists of a medley of Russian favourites, pounded out on an electric piano, making for a rather limited, though not inappropriate, soundtrack. The additional documentary essay is a useful overview, and the on-screen photo collection a valuable bonus.

On the DVD: it's good to have Oleg Donskikh's DVD commentary on The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty disc, as he points out economies with the actualité on a scene-by-scene basis. Yuri Sivrin's continuous commentary is required listening as a guide to the film-maker's art, as well as for shutting out the bizarre electronic score which otherwise serves as backing. All four films have been digitally remastered, and the 4:3 aspect ratio has excellent clarity. Stylishly packaged, there's no better way into the absorbing world of Soviet film than this. ---Richard Whitehouse



Synopsis

A box set comprising of 'Battleship Potemkin' - The classic Russian film which tells the dramatic story of a heroic mutiny on board one of the Czar's battleships in 1905. 'October 1917' -an account of Russia's October 1917 Revolution, in which Kerensky's Provisional Government was ousted by the Bolsheviks. 'Strike' which was Sergei Eisenstein's first film, containing many of the montage ideas for which he became justly famous. The story follows a revolt in a factory, and its murderous suppression and 'The Fall Of The Romanov Dynasty' Esfir Shub spent a considerable period of time searching through the archives of The Museum Of The Revolution and other damp cellars to locate preserved newsreels and random prints covering the 1917 Russian Revolution. With skill and great care she has produced here a account of what really happened. Russian dialogue with subtitles.

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5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning History Lesson, 25 Jun 2008
By Mr. P. Birtwistle "Philip Birtwistle" (Clitheroe) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Why couldn't history have been done like this when I was at school??? They should have just said,

"Russian Revolution, go and watch this lot, then come back and dicuss it."

Eisenstein's Greatest Hits is one possible subtitle for the first three parts of this box set, a unique and at times quite moving collection of films about Russia's change of direction in world history. STRIKE is almost documentary like, a journalistic film showing the progress of a worker's rebellion

THE BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN is probably his best know work, because of THAT scene, but once again the film eschews conventional story telling to take a super realist style approach that shows all to clearly what was happening in 1917.

OCTOBER 1917 is the last of Eisenstein's contributions to this set, and presents what is very much an official version of what went down in the fateful (for the Czar) final days of capitalist Russia. Maybe not up to the standards of POTEMKIN, but a fine film nonetheless.

The set is rounded out by an actual documentary made by Esfir Shub in 1927, which gives a more factual and less mythological overview of the revolution.

Eureka have worked well with the materials to hand, with two commentaries and two scrolling synopsies / background stories, a documentary essay and a photo gallery to round out the set, whcih is nicley presented in a digi-pack and slipcase.

Well worth buying if you're into silent films that didn't involve men falling over all the time.
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