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    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Posted By: FNB47
    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)
    729 MB | 1:38:59 | Russian with English <F> s/t | DivX, 900 Kb/s | 512x384

    Navigating the deadly waters of Stalinist politics, Eisenstein was able to film two parts of his planned trilogy about the troubled 16th-century tsar who united Russia. Visually stunning and powerfully acted, Ivan the Terrible charts the rise to power and descent into terror of this veritable dictator. Though pleased with the first installment, Stalin detected the portrait in the second film—with its summary executions and secret police—and promptly banned it. Criterion

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    A biography of the first czar of Russia was the final movie project of the great Sergei Eisenstein's life. It would be his undoing, as Stalin was not pleased with part II of this epic. But Ivan the Terrible, Part I still stands as a magnificent, rich, and strange achievement. This is a "composed" film to make Hitchcock look slapdash; every frame is arranged with the eye of a painter or choreographer, the mise-en-scène so deliberately artificial that even the actors' bodies become elements of style. (They complained about contorting themselves to fit Eisenstein's designs.) If you don't believe movies can be art, this could be (and has been) dismissed as ludicrous. But Eisenstein's command of light and shadow becomes its own justification, as the fascinating court intrigue plays out in a series of dynamic, eye-filling scenes. This is not a political theorist, but a director drunk on pure cinema. (–Robert Horton - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei Eisenstein, long regarded as a pioneer of film art, changed cinematic strategies halfway through his career. Upon returning from Hollywood and Mexico in the late 1930s, he left behind the densely edited style of celebrated silents like Battleship Potemkin and October, turning instead to historical sources, contradictory audiovisuals, and theatrical sets for his grandiose yet subversive sound-era work. This trio of rousing action epics reveals a deeply unsettling portrait of the Soviet Union under Stalin, and provided battle-scene blueprints for filmmaking giants from Laurence Olivier in Henry V to Akira Kurosawa in Seven Samurai.

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)

    Sergei M. Eisenstein-Ivan Groznyy I (1944)