Probably the more hyped-up a brand is the further it is
removed from the initially intended meaning and the more it reveals the
meaning of the material itself.
When we
compiled the first programs in the series “Socialist Avant-gardism”, our
guiding principle was the revolutionary form, which turned out to be
synonymous with the form of revolution, aesthetic and social
simultaneously. A revolution means going beyond generally accepted
norms. From this standpoint the principles of selecting films for the
program remain largely the same. It is the departure from accepted
canonical norms that unites so dissimilar films in the section. The
overthrow of old norms as a new norm is demanded by a revolution from
everyone without exception. But every year our program devotes more and
more attention to films whose authors go beyond what is generally
accepted, guided by their own personal project without insisting that
everyone should follow in their wake. That is why practically every film
in the present program has a distinct flavor of – so to speak –
attractive strangeness. It is noticeable even in examples of “poetic
cinema of the 60s”, traditionally included into our program, - debut
works of Yuri Ilienko “Spring for the Thirsty” (1965, released in late
80s), Bulat Mansurov “Contest” (1963) and “Daughter-in-Law” (1970) by
Khodzhakuli Narliev who was director of photography of all Mansurov’a
films of the 60s. The point is that this year we focused not so much on
the experiment, on playing with form, as on altering the ways of
narration. And then the screen biography of Dostoevsky shot in the
infamous style of “vulgar sociologism”, becomes a movie by Meyerhold’s
pupil Vasily Fyodorov “Dead House” (1932), an inner monologue of the
rebel crushed by the system. While the industrial drama about the
reconstruction of mines in Donbass called “Dreamers” (1934) by the
completely forgotten scriptwriter and director David Marian turns out to
be a series of philosophical dialogues about whether “man exists for
the revolution or the revolution exists for man”.
A
remarkable effect was achieved by transferring the events of the civil
war onto the circus arena in “Two-Buldi-Two” by Lev Kuleshov and “The
Last Attraction” by Olga Preobrazhenskaya and Ivan Pravov, which back in
1929 were considered a malicious digression from innovative principles…
Or the immersion of a fairly simple and charming everyday-life story
into the sultry atmosphere of a southern town in Rezo Esadze’s fantastic
“Love at First Sight” (1976)… Or the loneliness of man in the
unbearable empty expanses of Russia in “Out of Boredom” (1968), Gorky’s
cruel story, brilliantly put to the screen by Artur Voitetsky with the
purely Chekhovian intonation… And how smartly Hašek’s biography is
turned into an eccentric buffoonery in “Thoroughfare” (1963)
anticipating the cinema of Poloka, Motyl, Rasheev… It is hard to imagine
that the director is Yuri Ozerov, the future author of “Liberation”,
“Soldiers of Freedom” and other pompous “artistic-documentary” epics.
Similarly in his directorial debut "Roll-Call” (1966), where the
destinies of a tank crew of the Great Patriotic War and a modern
cosmonaut are interlaced, Daniil Khrabrovitsky is easily recognized as
the author of the classic “Thaw-time” films “Clear Sky” and “Nine Days
of One Year” and not as a director of the official films of the ensuing
decade “Taming the Fire” and “Poem about Wings”.
Incidentally,
many of the “eccentricities” in the movies included in the program are
accounted for by the fact that many of them were made by artists who had
switched to directing from other arts. It is not only the former
cameramen – Ilienko, Narliev, Karen Gevorkian (he is represented not by
the famous “A Piebald Dog: Running on the Edge of the Sea” but by his
first feature of 1974 “Here, on This Crossroads” which won a prize at
the IFF in Manheim in 1974). There are theatre people – Vasily Fyodorov,
Anatoly Efros who very accurately interpreted Emmanuil Kazakevich’s
novella “Two People in the Steppes” as an existential parable. There is
Boris Babochkin, who foretold the aesthetics of the cinema of the early
Thaw in his masterpiece of 1944 “Native Fields”. There are literary men:
besides Khrabrovitsky there is a great poet of the war-time generation
Grigory Pozhenian: in his only directorial work “Farewell” (1966) a war
episode is accompanied by a unique poetic commentary in the form of a
recitative performed y Mikael Tariverdiev. This “outside” approach to
the aesthetics of cinema makes such works especially interesting,
definitely unconventional even though amateurish in some ways.
But
“strange cinema” inevitably ends up on the roadside of classical
mainstream (even if at the time of the release some of its examples were
welcomed). It is forgotten for years and then with excitement and
amazement we rediscover in it the signs of the cinematic trends of the
ensuing decades.
Or even those which are still to become trends. If cinema is capable of remaining a full-fledged art of course.
Evgeniy Margolit
DVA-BULDI-DVA, Lev Kuleshov, Nina Agadzhanova
DVOE V STEPI, Anatoliy Efros
MECHTATELI, David Mar'yan
MYORTVIY DOM, Vasiliy Fedorov
NEVESTKA, Khodzha Kuli Narliyev
PEREKLICHKA, Daniil Khrabrovitskiy
POSLEDNIY ATTRAKTSION, Olga Preobrazhenskaya, Ivan Pravov
PROSCHAY, Grigoriy Pozhenyan
RODNIK DLYA ZHAZHDUSCHIKH, Yuriy Il'enko
RODNYE POLYA, Boris Babochkin, Anatoly Bosulaev
SHUKUR-BAKHSHI, Bulat Mansurov
SKUKI RADI, Artur Voytetskiy
VELKÁ CESTA, Yiri Ozerov
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT, Rezo Esadze
ZDES', NA ETOM PEREKRESTKE, Karen Gevorkyan