Film Review
There's a certain irony in the fact that a piece of blatant Communist
propaganda has become one of the most highly rated and influential
films in history. A landmark of Twentieth Century cinema,
Battleship Potemkin was originally
commissioned by the Communist Central Committee as part of a cycle of
films to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the failed 1905
uprising. Its director, Sergei Eisenstein, saw this as an ideal
opportunity to apply his well-developed theory of
montage, and the resulting film - a
spectacularly effective fusion of cinematic art and documentary-style
reportage - instantly established him as one of the foremost cineastes
of his generation.
Eisenstein's montage techniques are now well understood and widely
applied by most filmmakers but, when he first began using them in the
mid-1920s, they were to revolutionise the art of cinema.
Previously, editing was the pretty mundane process of cut-and-splice by
which a film was assembled from a large number of shots, rather like an
enormous jigsaw puzzle. Eisenstein developed editing into an art
in its own right - the art of
montage
- through several techniques which were intended to maximise a film's
impact on its spectator.
The most familiar of Eisenstein's montage techniques is
rhythmic montage, by which the
temporal sense is skewed for a specific purpose. This is achieved
either by having a fast sequence of short shots (so time appears to go
more quickly, creating suspense and tension) or by a slow sequence of
longer shots, maybe repeating the same shot from different angles (so
time appears to be slowing down, inviting inward-reflection).
Another technique which has great importance in Eisenstein's work is
dialectic (or intellectual)
montage. Here, two seemingly
unrelated images are juxtaposed to create an impression that is not
present in these two images. Dialect theory had a great impact on the
thinking of many Communist intellectuals and has been used as a
basis for many theories in areas as diverse as psychology, sociology,
biology and history. The fundamental idea of dialectics is that
two conflicting forces (thesis and antithesis) will result in something
new (the synthesis). Essentially, things happen as a result of
two things bouncing into one another.
The result of applying these montage techniques is that a film loses
its objectivity and becomes a highly subjective art form. Just as
a stylised painting can sometimes trigger a stronger emotional response
than a photograph of the same subject, a montage-treated film can have
a far greater sense of realism for a spectator, even if it is a less
accurate portrayal of reality. Montage is intended to engage our
emotions, and so the experience of watching the film feels richer, more
natural, and more likely to change the way we think. It is not
hard to see how useful this would be to the makers of propaganda
films. Film montage is a very effective means of achieving
psychological manipulation of the masses.
Battleship Potemkin gives us
Eisenstein's most explicit, and most effective, use of his montage
techniques. The film is nothing less than an unfettered
celebration of Communist ideology, rejoicing in the power of ordinary
workers to change history for their advantage. As in Eisenstein's
earlier film
Strike (1925),
the hero is not an individual but a collective mass of humanity,
unnamed brothers coming together in their millions to overthrow a
system that has no legitimacy. Eisenstein's use of montage makes
this an extraordinarily emotional work in which it is
impossible for the spectator not to
empathise with the revolutionary cause.
The massacre on the Odessa steps is a perfect example of Eisenstein's
dialectic montage, and this is probably why it is one of the most
memorable sequences ever committed to celluloid (even if it is entirely
fictitious). Shots of women, children and cripples are rapidly
inter-cut with shots of the Tsar's armed troops. Again and again,
we see the tormented, fearful faces of the victims, but all we see of
their killers are their boots and their guns. The dialectic is
simple but effective. Innocence versus brutality. Light
versus darkness. Us versus
them.
So powerful is this scene that at the end of it the spectator is left
reeling with shock and anger - just as Eisenstein had intended.
It was on the strength of this remarkable piece of cinema that the director was commissioned
to make another film in honour of the Russian Revolution,
October (1928).
© James Travers 2008
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