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Five–Year Plan for the Restoration and Development of Soviet Cinematography / Ivan Bolshakov, Minister of Cinematography of the Soviet Union – 2nd Edition (Revised) – Moscow: State Publishing House of Cinematic Literature, 1946 (Printing House "Red Banner") – 47 Pages; Soviet Cinema in 1947: Transcript of a Public Lecture Delivered on ...
In the year of the 60th anniversary of the Soviet cinema (1979), on April 25, a decision of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR established a commemorative "Soviet Cinema Day ". It was then celebrated in the USSR each year on August 27, the day on which Vladimir Lenin signed a decree to nationalise the country's cinematic and ...
During the 1930s, Soviet film began assembling their film around unstructured plotting. This marked a shift away from the Soviet montage cinema of the 1920s, and signaled the advent of mandated socialist realism in 1934. The goal of this design was to ensure a focus on digestible theme in contrast to heavily structured plot.
Since the second half of the 1960s, Vysotsky's appearance on the screen was always accompanied by press coverage; in 1975, the Iskusstvo Publishing House published the book Actors of the Soviet Cinema with an article by Irina Rubanova entitled Vladimir Vysotsky, which became the most complete lifetime study of the artist's cinematic work.
Russian Futurist cinema refers to the futurist movement in Soviet cinema. Russian Futurist cinema was deeply influenced by the films of Italian futurism (1916–1919) most of which are lost today. Some of the film directors identified as part of this movement are Lev Kuleshov , Dziga Vertov , Sergei Eisenstein , Vsevolod Pudovkin and Aleksandr ...
This category contains pages supported by the Soviet and post-Soviet cinema task force of WikiProject Film and WikiProject Soviet Union which have been rated as "Template-Class". Pages are automatically placed in this category by the relevant parameters in the {{ WikiProject Film }} project banner; please see the assessment department and the ...
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Lev Vladimirovich Kuleshov (Russian: Лев Владимирович Кулешов; 13 January [O.S. 1 January] 1899 – 29 March 1970) was a Russian and Soviet filmmaker and film theorist, one of the founders of the world's first film school, the Moscow Film School. [1] He was given the title People's Artist of the RSFSR in 1969.