Film Review
On the strength of his 1925 film
Battleship
Potemkin, the great Russian cineaste Sergei Eisenstein was
commissioned by the Soviet Union's October Revolution Jubilee Committee
to make a film celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Russian
Revolution. The result is one of the most remarkable films ever
made, although it was badly received by its sponsors, who believed
(rightly as it turned out) that it was far too intellectual and
stylised to be appreciated by ordinary working class people.
Whilst Grigori Aleksandrov is credited with co-directing the film,
it is evident in virtually every shot that Eisenstein was the real creative force behind it.
Originally titled
Oktyabr (
Октябрь
in Russian Cyrillic), the
film is known in the English-speaking world as
October,
October 1917 and
Ten Days That Shook the World.
The latter - a manifestly inaccurate description of the film's content
- was taken from the title of a book by an eminent American journalist,
John Reed, who observed for himself the Russian Revolution.
Confusingly, the date of the "October Revolution" (a.k.a. the Bolshevik
Revolution) is November in the current calendar.
October isn't so much a
historical drama as a bold experiment in filmmaking technique.
Inspired by dialectic theory (used by Marx and Engels to explain
historical progress), whereby conflicting forces (thesis and
antithesis) are reconciled (as a synthesis), Eisenstein developed a new
technique - dialectic montage. Here, opposing themes or symbols
are rapidly intercut, and a resultant, logically explicable, outcome is
shown. The film's subject is the most obvious example of this
idea. The old order of the Tsars is brought into conflict with
the new order, represented by the working masses, and the result is a
new nation, the Soviet Union of Socialist Republics.
Eisenstein's heavy use of symbolism in
October is as mystifying today as
when the film was first seen. Some of the visual metaphors are
easily understood - such as the likening of Kerenski to the Emperor
Napoleon or a preening peacock. Many others are much more
abstruse, and it is this which contributed to the film's initial
dismissal - both in Russia and in other countries where it was seen -
as a piece of intellectual self-indulgence.
Another reason why the film was less successful than its director had
envisaged was because he was obliged to make some dramatic cuts before
it could be accepted by his paymasters. In the original film,
Leon Trotsky (the most important figure in the original Communist Party
after Vladimir Lenin), was a significant presence. In 1927,
Trotsky fell out with the Stalinist leadership and was expelled from
the Party. (He was driven out of the Soviet Union the following
year and, after a decade in which he fervently opposed Stalinism, he
was assassinated, most probably under Stalin's orders, in 1940).
Consequently, all the sequences in which Trotsky appeared had to be
excised from the film, which resulted in about a quarter of the content
being lost. This no doubt contributed to the film's lack of
coherence and its rather jumpy narrative construction.
In a more enlightened age, the genius of Eisenstein's work is far more
widely appreciated and
October
is regarded, along with his other great films -
Battleship
Potemkin (1925),
Alexander Nevsky (1938) and
Ivan the Terrible (1944/1958) - as
one of the landmark films of the Twentieth Century. The
film's historical inaccuracies have been well-documented (for example,
the tumbling of the statue of Alexander III happened in 1921, not
1917), but Eisenstein's main preoccupation was not to give us a textbook
account of the Russian Revolution. Rather, his motivation
was to convey some idea of the extraordinary feelings that seized the
Russian people in one momentous year.
In his great paean to the Communist Utopia in which he lived,
Eisenstein set out to show how the collective strength and heroism of
ordinary Russian workers and soldiers could rip the guts out of a
failed social system and bring about an historic change. Even
today, the scale of the film's more ambitious sequences - streets
swelling with tens of thousands of people, frenzied battles between the
opposing factions, the iconic storming of the Winter Palace - leaves
the spectator struck with awe.
October is an intensely emotional
work of poetry (in the tradition of Pushkin and Lermontov), in which
Eisenstein celebrates his belief in the Marxist Communist ideal and
rejoices in the inherent nobility of the proletariat - whilst also
nurturing an entirely new approach to cinematic expressionism.
© James Travers 2008
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