Montage Theories of Soviet Cinema

January 16, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Social Science, Psychology, Social Psychology
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Montage Theories of Soviet Cinema

Presentation by Chris Schloemp Sources: http://cinetext.philo.at/reports/sv.html http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Stephen_Nottingham/cintxt1.htm

Soviet Cinema in the 1920s • Vibrant film culture in the period following the Russian Revolution • Influential developments in film theory • Several films stand as landmarks in the history of world cinema

Development of Formalism • Dominant film theory of the silent era • Applied to a range of arts, including literature and painting • Holds that a work’s meaning exists primarily in its form or language, rather than its content or subject

The Pioneer: Lev Kuleshov • Re-edited existing film stock to develop ideas of film grammar • Formed workshops in 1920 at the State Film School • Central belief: the viewer’s response in cinema depends less on the individual shot and more on the editing or montage

The Kuleshov Effect • Famous experiment with shot juxtapositions • First shot: c/u of actor with neutral expression, then joined this shot to: – c/u of a bowl of soup – c/u of a coffin with a corpse – c/u of a little girl playing

• Test audiences praised the actor’s versatility in showing hunger, sorrow, and pride, even though the shot of the actor remained the same each time

Dziga Vertov • Enthusiastic about film’s potential as educational and propagandistic tool • Since Russian society was composed of illiterate workers and peasants, they needed a different medium of instruction • Believed that ideal medium was the documentary film

“Art is not a mirror which reflects the historical struggle, but a weapon of that struggle” --Dziga Vertov

Kino-Pravda • Vertov’s primary theory: “film-truth” • Fiction films, acted films as opiates, that prevented a necessary confrontation with reality • Filmmaker sees beneath the surface chaos to reveal the underlying connections to the institutions of power • Filmmaker as poet, as fuser of images

Sergei Eisenstein • Strike (1924) • Battleship Potemkin (1925) • October (1927) • The General Line (1928)

Theory of Intellectual Montage • Film constructed as a series of colliding shocks or “attractions” • Montage as a dialectical process (from Hegel: thesis vs. antithesis = synthesis) • Meaning created by juxtaposition of shots, not the content of individual images • Shocks created for ideological purpose

Example of Montage • Strike (1924) • Nature of the slaughter perpetrated by the Cossack army is conveyed by juxtaposing: – scenes of advancing soldiers – a bull being slaughtered – ink being spilled over a street-map of the city being attacked

Sound and the Rhythm of Editing • Sound and vision could be treated independently or used in concert • Shots in film and phrases of music could be timed together to increase the impact of a key shot • Rhythm of music can accent the rhythm of editing, of montage

Acting as Typage • Eisenstein, like other Soviet filmmakers of his time, was not interested in using professional actors • Asked amateurs to draw on their experiences of their own lives • Typage: when people in films represent archetypes due to their resemblance to universal groups in society

V.I. Pudovkin • Mother (1926) • The End of St. Petersburg (1927)

Relational Editing • Different style of montage • Seamless, without drawing attention to itself • Used solely to support the film’s narrative • Also known as linkage editing • Similar to the editing style developed by D.W. Griffith in the US

Dovzhenko and the Use of Tableaux • Arsenal (1929) & Earth (1930) • Series of tableaux: a linkage of still photographs • Slow pace and solemn atmosphere • Long shots of archetypal figures, often in silhouette

Film as Propaganda • All Soviet filmmakers worked under a unique set of social conditions after the Revolution of 1917 • Cinema regarded as educational tool to promote the ideals of communism • Overtly political films: images used to illustrate history in textbooks • Limited to one basic storyline: triumph of the people over bourgeois oppression

Influences from Pavlov and Freud • Sought fusion of art and science • Pavlov’s theories about conditioned reflexes to stimuli (the famous salivating dogs) very influential on montage theory • Controlled series of shocks could produce predictable response • Freud’s theories of the unconscious also helped influence the use of symbols in Soviet films

Lasting Impact • Soviet cinema continues to inspire filmmakers today • Emphasis on the process of film rather than the content of narratives seen in the work of 1960s film-makers • Some contemporary filmmakers see the opportunities of using non-diegetic elements in montage sequences

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