BRONENOSEC POTËMKIN

Sergej Ejzenštejn

Scen.: Nina Agadžanova-Šutko, Sergej Ejzenštejn. F.: Eduard Tissė. Scgf.: Vasilij Rachal’s. Mus.: Edmund Meisel. Int.: Aleksandr Antonov (marinaio Vakulinčuk), Vladimir Barskij (comandante Golikov), Grigorij Aleksandrov (ufficiale Giljarovskij), Aleksandr Levšin, Andrej Fajt, Marusov (ufficiali), Zavitok (medico di bordo Smirnov), Michail Gomorov (marinaio nel comizio), Ivan Bobrov (marinaio recluta). Prod.: Goskino. 35mm. L.: 1401 m. D.: 68’ a 18 f/s. Bn.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

In spring of 1925 young Sergej Ejzenštejn, who had recently debuted as a director with Strike!, was hired to direct a film celebrating the twentieth anniversary of the 1905 Russian Revolution. The film was titled Bronenosec Potëmkin and was shot and edited in four months. Although formally limited to the 1905 episode – the mutiny of the crew of a military ship in the Black Sea – the film reflected the main themes of the Revolution: the cruelty of the autocratic regime and social unrest for freedom.

The first screening was held on December 21 at the Bolshoi Theatre during the jubilee festivities. Despite its triumphant success, the film commission decided to screen Potëmkin only in workers’ clubs after conferences and meetings: no one thought that film audiences would be interested in a movie without stars and without the usual adventure or love story. Legend has it that Futurist poet Vladimir Majakovskij threatened to use his heavy cane if the film was not distributed at large. When it was first screened in theaters, this movie ‘without individual heroes’ and ‘without a story of intrigue’ could compete with biggest Hollywood commercial success of that year, Robin Hood with Douglas Fairbanks.

In the spring of 1925 German censors tried to stop Potëmkin’s release, fearing that the film on the 1905 Revolution in Russia could provoke revolutionary sentiment in Germany with its emotional power. Social democrat deputies in the Reichstag won the battle against censorship demonstrating that the film was not ‘subversive’ in any way. Indeed, it was actually grounded in the democratic slogan of “fight against despotism and social inequality” but also the humanistic message of “stop reciprocal violence”. That said, the film was cut for censorship purposes, and in some areas of Germany the magnificent soundtrack composed by Edmund Meisel was banned.

In most of Europe, Asia and South America censors were no less short-sighted and fearful than their German colleagues, and Bronenosec Potëmkin was banned for a long time. It began to be redistributed only after World War II: with its soundtrack in theaters and without it at film archives and festivals. At the Brussels World Fair in 1958 it was at the top of the list of the twelve best films of all time, and ever since it has been considered an undisputed international masterpiece.

Thanks to the efforts of archives in Russia, Germany, Great Britain and the United States and the work of film historians, composers and directors, the original versions of Ejzenštejn’s film and Meisel’s score have been restored. Today Bronenosec Potëmkin appears just as alive and riveting as it did ninety years ago. And the film’s main theme hasn’t aged: that a sense of brotherhood, abandoning violence and recognizing the bond connecting all of us on earth are necessary for freedom and human equality.

Naum Klejman

Restored in 35mm in 2005 by Deutsche Kinemathek with the support of Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv, BFI – National Archive and Russian State Archive of Literature and Arts (RGALI). For the reconstructed version of the film, Edmund Meisel’s music, composed for the film’s German premiere in 1926, was revised by Helmut Imig with advice from Lothar Prox. Original music by Edmund Meisel performed by Filarmonica del Teatro Comunale di Bologna diretta da Helmut Imig