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 The Battleship Potemkin (DVD) Movie DVD
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The Battleship Potemkin (DVD)

 

Description: Genre: Drama / Theatrical Release: 1925 / Actors: Grigory Alexandrov, Alexander Antonov ... / DVD released 07 October, ... more
The Battleship Potemkin (DVD) ... 1998 at Image Entertainment / Features of the DVD: AC-3, Black & White, DVD-Video, NTSC / Sergei Eisenstein's revolutionary sophomore feature has so long stood as a textbook example of montage editing that many have forgotten what an invigoratingly cinematic experience he created. A 20th-anniversary tribute to the 1905 revolution, Eisenstein portrays the revolt in microcosm with a dramatisation of the real-life mutiny aboard the battleship Potemkin. The story tells a familiar party-line message of the oppressed working class (in this case the enlisted sailors) banding together to overthrow their oppressors (the ship's officers), led by proto-revolutionary Vakulinchuk. When he dies in the shipboard struggle the crew lays his body to rest on the pier, a moody, moving scene where the citizens of Odessa slowly emerge from the fog to pay their respects. As the crowd grows Eisenstein turns the tenor from mourning a fallen comrade to celebrating the collective achievement. The government responds by sending soldiers and ships to deal with the mutinous crew and the supportive townspeople, which climaxes in the justly famous (and often imitated and parodied) Odessa Steps massacre. Eisenstein edits carefully orchestrated motions within the frame to create broad swaths of movement, shots of varying length to build the rhythm, close-ups for perspective and shock effect, and symbolic imagery for commentary, all to create one of the most cinematically exciting sequences in film history. Eisenstein's film is Marxist propaganda to be sure but the power of this masterpiece lies not in its preaching but its poetry. --Sean Axmaker

Newest Review: ... the sailors, to the floor. Having made their decision, representatives of the people of Odessa sail out to the Potemkin in a ... more

 ... flotilla of small ships laden with food and livestock. They replenish the supplies of the sailors, and return to shore, waving the warship away as it goes to further the revolution. At this point, however, a group of Czarist soldiers, who have had reports of civil unrest and disobedience, arrive in the town. As the crowd flees from the armed unit the soldiers open fire, steadily pursuing the people down the Odessa Steps and firing at will, killing anyone they wish, including women with their babies and children...more

Brett+Bligh
Premium Review The Battleship Potemkin (DVD): The Battleship Potemkin (1925). (1520 words)
by Brett Bligh - written on 14.11.00 (Very useful, 96 readings)
Rating:

Having purchased this film more on the basis that it had once been banned in this country than any recognition of the title as a landmark of world cinema, I soon realised as the DVD began to play that what I was watching was a true classic of the type that mainstream film critics often wax lyrical about (and, consequently, would not always be of interest to me since my tastes tend more towards the obscure), but that, in this case, the film actually carried a very anti-establishment message, or at the very least a message against the establishment which has always been present in Britain and now rules once again in the film’s country of origin, Russia. The ...

 
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The Battleship Potemkin (DVD)