Strike (1925 film)
Strike | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sergei Eisenstein |
Produced by | Boris Mikhin |
Written by |
Grigori Aleksandrov Ilya Kravchunovsky Sergei M. Eisenstein Valeryan Pletnyov |
Cinematography | Eduard Tisse |
Release dates | 28 April 1925 (USSR) |
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language |
Silent film Russian intertitles |
Strike (Russian: Стачка, translit. Stachka) is a 1925 silent film made in the Soviet Union by Sergei Eisenstein. It was Eisenstein's first full-length feature film, and he would go on to make The Battleship Potemkin later that year. It was acted by the Proletcult Theatre, and composed of six parts. It was in turn, intended to be one part of a seven-part series,[1] entitled Towards Dictatorship (of the proletariat), that was left unfinished. Eisenstein's influential essay, Montage of Attractions was written between Strike's production and premiere.[2]
The film depicts a strike in 1903 by the workers of a factory in pre-revolutionary Russia, and their subsequent suppression. The film is most famous for a sequence near the end in which the violent suppression of the strike is cross-cut with footage of cattle being slaughtered, although there are several other points in the movie where animals are used as metaphors for the conditions of various individuals.[3] Another theme in the film is collectivism in opposition to individualism which was viewed as a convention of western film.[4] Collective efforts and collectivization of characters were central to both Strike and Battleship Potemkin.[5]
Plot summary
The film opens with a quotation from Vladimir Lenin:
The strength of the working class is organization. Without organization of the masses, the proletarian is nothing. Organized it is everything. Being organized means unity of action, unity of practical activity.[6][7]
- На заводе всё спокойно / At the factory all is quiet
Using typography, the word "но" (but) is added to the title of the chapter which then animates and dissolves into an image of machinery in motion.[3][8] The administration is spying on the workers, reviewing a list of agents with vivid code names.[9] Vignettes are shown of them. Conditions are tense with agitators and bolsheviks planning a strike prior to the catalytic event.[10]
- Повод к стачке / Reason to strike
A micrometer is stolen, with a value of 25 rubles or 3 weeks pay.[11] A worker, Yakov, is accused of the theft and subsequently hangs himself.[12] Fighting ensues and work stops. The workers leave the milling room running and resistance is met at the foundry. The strikers throw rocks and loose metal through the foundry windows. Then locked within the gates of the complex, the crowd confronts the office. They force open the gates and seize a manager carting him off in a wheel barrow dumping them down a hill into the water.[13] The crowd disperses.
- Завод замер / The factory dies down
The chapter begins with footage of ducklings, kittens, piglets, and geese.[14] A child then wakes his father for work ironically with no work to do, they laugh and frolic. The factory is shown vacant and still with birds moving in. The children act out what their fathers had done, wheelbarrowing a goat in a mob. The owner is frustrated by orders arriving and the frozen plant. Demands are formulated: an 8 hour work day,[15] fair treatment by the administration,[16] 30% wage increases,[17] and a 6 hour day for minors.[18] The shareholders get involved with the director and read the demands. They discuss dismissively while smoking cigars and having drinks. Presumably on the orders of the shareholders, the police raid the workers,[19] and they sit down to protest. At their meeting the shareholders use the demand letter as a rag to clean up a spill,[20] and a lemon squeezer metaphorically[21] represents the pressure the stockholders intend to apply to the strikers.
- Стачка затягивается / The strike draws out
Scenes are shown of a line forming at a store which is closed, and a baby needing food.[22] A fight occurs at a home between a man and a woman, subsequently she leaves. Another man rummages through his home for goods to sell at a flea market, upsetting his family.[23] A posted letter publicly shows the administrators rejection of the demands. Using a hidden camera in a pocket watch, a spy named "Owl" photographs someone stealing the letter.[24] The pictures are transferred to another spy. The man is beaten, captured, and beaten again.[25]
- Провокация на разгром / Provocation and debacle
The scene opens with dead cats dangling from a structure.[26] A character is introduced, "King" whose throne is made of a derelict automobile amidst rubbish, and who leads a community that lives in enormous barrels buried with only their top openings above ground.[27] After a deal with a tsarist police agent, "King" hires a few provocateurs from among his community to set fire, raze, and loot a liquor store.[28] A crowd gathers at the fire and the alarm is sounded. The crowd leaves to avoid being provoked but are set upon by the firemen with their hoses regardless.[29]
- Ликвидация / Extermination
The governor sends in the military. A child walks under the soldiers' horses and his mother goes under to get him and is struck.[30] Rioting commences, and the crowd is chased off through a series of gates and barriers heading to the forge, then their apartments. The crowd is chased and whipped on the balconies. A policeman murders a small child.[31] The workers are driven into a field by the army and shot en masse.[32] this is shown with alternating footage of the slaughtering of a cow.
Cast
- Maksim Shtraukh — Police spy
- Grigori Aleksandrov — Factory foreman
- Mikhail Gomorov — Worker
- I. Ivanov — Chief of police
- Ivan Klyukvin — Revolutionary
- Aleksandr Antonov — Member of strike committee
- Yudif Glizer — Queen of thieves
- Anatoli Kuznetsov
- Vera Yanukova
- Vladimir Uralsky (as V. Uralsky)
- M. Mamin
Notes
- ↑ Leyda & Voynow 1982, p. 16
- ↑ Leyda & Voynow 1982, p. 154
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Bordwell 1993, p. 54
- ↑ Leyda 1960, p. 181
- ↑ Bordwell 1993, p. 63
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:10
- ↑ Bordwell 1993, p. 51
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:58—2:06
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 6:45
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 17:45
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 20:03
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 22:42
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 32:40
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 34:40
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 39:23
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 39:34
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 39:43
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 41:14
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 43:30
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 45:40
- ↑ Bordwell 1993, p. 58
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 49:05
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 50:52
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 57:04
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 101:11
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:05:55
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:08:30
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:13:38
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:18:30
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:24:18
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:29:52
- ↑ Eisenstein 2000, 1:33:00
References
- Bordwell, David (1993), The Cinema of Eisenstein, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-13138-5.
- Eisenstein, Sergei (2000), Strike [DVD], Chatsworth, CA: Image Entertainment, OCLC 44966872 originally Goskino, 1925.
- Leyda, Jay (1960), Kino: A History Of The Russian And Soviet Film, New York: Macmillan, OCLC 1683826.
- Leyda, Jay; Voynow, Zina (1982), Eisenstein At Work, New York: Pantheon, ISBN 978-0-394-74812-2.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Strike (film). |
- Strike at the Internet Movie Database
- Стачка / The Strike on YouTube
- Strike is available for free download at the Internet Archive
- Strike at AllMovie
- Strike watchable and downloadable with Esperanto subtitles
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