The Peasant Women of Ryazan (Preobrazhenskaia, 1927) - Wedding Reception Clip
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The Peasant Women of Ryazan (Preobrazhenskaia, 1927) - Wedding Reception Clip
Father of Montage, Sergei Eisenstein, claims that
“The footage captured by a camera is nothing more than raw material. Not until that raw material is edited do you have a film”
The Idea of Montage in Soviet Art and Film
Passages from the Cinema Journal regarding the idea of montage in soviet art and film:
“Between 1924 and 1930, several Soviet films exhibited a radically original film style, generally known as the montage style. Montage was used to build a narrative (by formulating an artificial time and space or guiding the viewer's attention from one narrative point to another), to control rhythm, to create metaphors, and to make rhetorical points.
The possibility of the montage principle's application in various arts becomes more likely when we notice that the Soviet montage films reveal two fairly distinct tendencies. Kuleshov's films, and most of Pudovkin's, use montage solely for rhythmic and narrative ends; the juxtaposition of shots becomes a way to bring out the shape and nuances of a story.
Eisenstein's and Vertov's films, though, constantly go beyond narrative editing to make metaphorical and rhetorical statements by means of montage. The theories of Eisenstein and Vertov are often extravagantly ambitious. Eisenstein claims that his theory foresaw "transmuting to screen form the abstract concept, the course and halt of concepts and ideas-without intermediary. Without recourse to story, or invented plot." Vertov asserted that the news- reel can include ideological argument, "any political, economic, or other motif." ”
Source: Bordwell, David. "The Idea of Montage in Soviet Art and Film." Cinema Journal 11, no. 2 (1972): 9-17.
Dissertation work while watching titanic for seminar #multitasking #filmstudies #continuityediting #sovietmontage
sovietmontage replied to your quote:Where Verhoeven, however, had the advantage of...
Nayman is chronically wrong about most things.
This is the first piece of his I've read and I'm not surprised, considering he describes Crank as the first film with an effective Statham performance, and you'd have to have your head up your ass to not think Jason Statham is great in all his films.
Still though, great to see anybody writing about Neveldine/Taylor.
sovietmontage replied to your post:why do all of you people like Lore????
I keep forgetting that I’ve seen it.
same, I remember none of it
sovietmontage replied to your photoset
What did you think?
I liked it at the beginning, though towards the end is where it really intrigued me and became something much bigger and more profound, and moving