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22 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant Eisenstein Aided By a Strong Shostakovich Score, 10 January 2004
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Author:
Ralph Michael Stein (riglltesobxs@mailinator.com) from New York, N.Y.
American John Reed, who never met a Bolshevik he didn't admire and trust,
wrote a still spellbinding first-hand account, "Ten Days That Shook the
World," of the November (October in the Old Style calendar) revolution that
ended Russia's Provisional Government. Directors Sergei Eisenstein and
Grigori Aleksandrov dipped into Reed's almost breathless panegyric to the
quixotic and jumbled events that led to the capture of the fabled Winter
Palace for the epic, "Oktyabr" (shown here as "October").
Whatever Aleksandrov's contribution, this is emphatically and unmistakably
Eisenstein's film and it's a masterpiece. Tracing the increasingly chaotic
days from the overthrow of the Romanovs until the victory of the Bolsheviks
and their foolishly trusting partners, Eisenstein's 1927 movie freezes the
mood and emotions of one of the most turbulent episodes in Russian, indeed
in world, history.
A signature technique of Eisenstein is the fast pan from enormous, fluid and
raging crowd action (here occasionally taken from news film but more often
staged with a cast of thousands) to a closeup of faces that reflect deep
emotion. As in "Battleship Potemkin," dealing with an earlier phase of the
unraveling of tsarist Russia, Eisenstein's heroes are the proletariat, poor
but possessed of a fierce and empowering nobility. The bourgeoisie are
inflated, food and drink-sated fools, their supercilious natures reflected
by expressions bordering on the imbecilic.
With Eisenstein's films, viewers tend to remember several scenes that most
exported his vision. Here a dead horse and a long-haired young woman,
killed as she joined in a workers' protest, undergo a slow passage from the
deck of an opening bridge into a river. It's harrowing,
unforgettable.
Lenin is, of course, a hero. The hero. Trotsky, on his way to banishment
and eventual assassination, is shown as a weak would-be compromiser,
actually a mild obstacle to the march of the Soviets to power. I bet he
didn't like this movie.
Contrasting peoples' moods with still shots of objects was always an
Eisenstein trait. The workers are juxtaposed with weapons, streets,
bridges. The feckless Kerensky, head of the Provisional Government, is
pictured against statuettes of Napoleon. Depicted as a coward he abandons
his cabinet in a car bedecked with a small American flag. The flag is shown
several times. I wonder why. And the poor tsar and tsarina, soon to be
brutally murdered with their children and servants at Ekaterinburg, have
their framed photos alternated with those of their imperial
commode.
Dmitri Shostakovich, not simply the greatest Russian composer of the last
century but also one of the world's finest, was ideologically and creatively
in tune, no pun intended, with Eisenstein and officialdom's retrospective
paean to the Bolshevik overthrow. In 1927 he was years away from being
Russia's most endangered composer because of the whims of the madman, Stalin
(who isn't in this film). His score is hardly his best work, not even his
finest film music. It is an effective accompaniment to the
action.
Originally a silent film, the added-on soundtrack has virtually no speech
but the sounds of marching, running, trains, guns and other objects enliven
the picture, now faithfully and well-restored.
"Oktyabr" is, of course, a political polemic and the history portrayed is
what the party ordained as truth. Eisenstein was a brilliant innovator but
he was no counter-revolutionary deviationist and wrecker. He adhered to the
party line and so does the movie.
The restored print is making the rounds of film societies and art theaters
and should, if possible, be viewed on a large screen. But even on a TV set
"Oktyabr" will reach out and grip the viewer.
10/10. A milestone in film-making.
15 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
an early Soviet classic of visuals that should be seen by anyone serious about editing, 3 August 2006
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
I think that Sergei Eisenstein, who has (rightfully) been credited as
one of the grandfathers of modern cinema, is sometimes forgotten as
someone who can really direct great epic scenes along with making them
expertly edited. The filmmaker here knows he's pushing along an
ideology, one that is not only encouraged but all but required of him
to give to the public. But he also knows that to put out the message
there needs to be some conviction, surprise, something to catch eyes as
the information's already known. Perhaps even to a greater extent than
Battleship Potemkin, October: Ten Days That Shook the World puts on
display a director with total confidence not only in his flourishing,
insistent style, but in that of his mostly non-professional actors,
crowds, real-locations, sets, and his crew. It's one of the most
assured pieces of silent film-making I've ever seen, and it's taken a
few viewings to take in everything in one sitting (I ended up watching
half an hour, and then sitting back trying to remember everything I
just saw, or thought I saw).
Some uses of montage in the film- make that most if not all- rival
those of even the better editors working in commercials and music
videos today. Like those editors, they're working with images meant to
be dynamic and to the point. Here it's the story of the 1917 Bolshevik
revolution in Russia, where Lenin took control of the reigns of the
provisional government with left the country at a stand-still in
poverty. Or, at least, that's how the film would definitely lead things
onto. Watching a film like this and seeing 100% accuracy is irrelevant.
But watching it to get a sense of what cinema is supposed to- and can
do- with tricky subject matter, is completely worthwhile. Some of these
scenes are just pure masterpieces of crowd control; when the people
mass together in the town square, for example, one might immediately
think of the Odessa stairs from Potemkin. Here, however, there's more
than one chance for such operatic takes on harsh realities. The
beginning- where they tear down the statue- is striking enough. But
just watch when the crowd has to disperse and runs around early on in
the film, or especially the storming of the Winter Palace. Could you do
the same material with computers today? More than likely, but not with
the same conviction and 'this-was-really-happening' feel that a camera
(recreating) on the scene could get. And, sometimes, as when the
monument/statue gets 'put back together', it's almost amusing but still
convincing of what the medium can do.
And soon enough Eisenstein reaches his climax, the immense lot of 10
days that brought the country to a peak of change and possible
prosperity for its people. It's like October for the Russian people of
the time is like a thousand or so snapshots of that time and place in
the world. The one point that Eisenstein poses for his viewers- not
just for his of-the-period silent film crowd but for those watching
today- is that he is not making it boring for those who can give
themselves to the images, the moments taken with some shots more than
others. Anyone getting into editing, I think, should see at least some
of Eisenstein's films to get an idea of where the smoke of post-modern
film-making generated. October is probably one of his prime examples;
if you want to watch it for purely historical or political contexts it
may be hit or miss depending on point of view, but it is hard to see as
a misfire in telling a story using spectacular and imaginative
compositions with the frame, lighting, and with specific, profound
musical accompaniment by Edmund Meisel.
13 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Modern film-making started here, 4 February 2005
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Author:
iain_connell from United Kingdom
I first saw this film in the late 80s at the NFT (UK National Film
Theatre) with a piano accompaniment. The print was scratchy and the
inter-titles longer than several of the scenes. I was expecting it to
be interesting as an example of Eisenstein's use of montage and
cross-cutting (and indeed the audience seemed to be composed mainly of
film students), thus worthy and perhaps a little dull. Instead, I was
stunned. Now released on DVD with a Shostakovitch score and sparse
sound effects, the film is revealed as masterpiece which surpasses both
Battleship Potyomkin (1925) and Alexander Nevsky (1938) in its use of
these two, and many more, filmic devices.
It's a young man's film and completely of its time and place, that is
to say it gives a romanticised and idealised view of the Bolshevic
revolution and its origins. The Tsar is directly compared to a horse's
arse, Lenin harangues from the front of a steam engine, the proletariat
are the true beneficiaries of the revolution. Statues fall apart and
are re-formed in reverse motion, the people re-enact the storming of
the winter palace (and climb its real gates), the battles cross-cut
from faces and hands to carefully staged set pieces. In the second most
famous sequence in early film history (the other being the Odessa steps
from Potyomkin), a young woman's hair flops over the edge of a rising
bridge while a cart and dead horse drop into the water.
The film is politically naive but decades ahead of its time in every
other respect. The young people who inhabit these pages might like to
compare its editing and pacing with that of the average music video and
CGI-driven special effects film. I contend there is essentially nothing
in these which they will not find in Eisenstein, and in October
(Oktyabr) in particular. Yes, it's black and white, and silent but for
the lately added score, and yes, it's from the early 20th century (by
no means the earliest history of film), but it still stuns after
repeated viewing. This is where modern film-making started, and
everything we think we know about it (slow motion, montage, cross-cuts,
reverses, you name it) had its origins in Eisenstein. The inter-titles
(not sub-titles) still go on too long, though.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
October, 28 October 2006
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Author:
Steffi_P from Ruritania
This, Eisenstein's third film, represents the peak in development of
his montage technique. It is arguably the "biggest" film he had made to
date in the sense that it was made with the largest number of extras
and highest budget he had yet handled. Also, it steps further into the
characterlessness of his previous silent films, being in many ways
closer to a documentary than a historical feature.
The montage in October is taken to new heights. In an early scene in
which a machine gun regiment opens fire on a demonstration, incredibly
rapid editing back-and-forth between a shot of a gun barrel and the
mean look on the gunner's face suggests both the action and the sound
of the gun. Another aspect of the montage which Eisenstein makes
extensive use of in October is expressing ideas by editing in shots of
objects from outside the setting or at least unrelated to the
narrative. For example, images of the Tsar's clockwork toys are spliced
into a scene in which the highly unpopular provisional government
ministers meet together. In another scene a series of increasingly
primitive looking religious statues from all over the world are paraded
to ridicule the church. While often ingenious, this crosscutting can
sometimes be a little heavy handed and obvious. For example, do we
really need to flit back and forth so many times between a shot of
Kerensky and a statue of Napoleon to understand what is being implied?
As well as the allegories conveyed through montage, there are also a
few metaphors in shot composition or basic action. When the red guards
are ransacking they have a laugh amongst themselves when pulling a
decorative cushion off an ornate chair reveals a commode. There are
also plenty of Eisenstein's trademark funny faces particularly ugly
or bizarre looking actors are cast as people Eisenstein wanted to
appear ridiculous, such as the Mensheviks and provisional government
ministers.
Eisenstein's direction of crowds is, as ever, flawless. So much so in
October that parts of it have been mistaken for actual historical
footage of the revolution. A very convincing look-alike of Lenin also
pops up from time to time, although I have to say the guy who plays
Trotsky looks more like a young Rolf Harris. The events portrayed do
seem to be largely historically accurate, albeit from a skewed angle.
The Bolsheviks are hero worshipped out of proportion to their actual
importance at the time, and Eisenstein constantly promotes the Leninist
notion that the masses cannot progress without the guidance of the
party. Still, this was the philosophy of the dictatorship in which
Eisenstein was operating.
October may be the most technically proficient and finely crafted of
all Eisenstein's films. However, it lacks the humanity of Strike and
Battleship Potemkin. It's an incredible film, just highly impersonal,
which can make for difficult viewing. One final note the only version
available on DVD here in the UK is from Eureka, which as well as having
no extras has some terribly translated intertitles, although I
understand there are very nice editions of all Eisenstein's films
available on Region 1 from Criterion.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Political Idealogy, 28 January 2002
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Author:
marquis de cinema from Boston, MA
Fascinating Russian silent feature which is interested in the final moments of the Russian Revolution which brought the Communist to power. Film was part of a series involving Revolutions and protests which included Strike(1924) and Battleship Potemkin(1925). Interestingly, film puts a lot of the attention of Trotsky than Lenin. He(Trotsky) is portrayed as one of the heros of the revolution as well as a great Russian figure. Striking use of montage helps give the film its artistic flavor. One of the ten Russian silent films from the 1920s. Acting is nothing special yet gains the viewer's attention with the passion and emotion eched on by the performers. Was not popular with the Stalin regime because of the popular depiction of Trotsky. The beginning of a battle of censorship between Eisenstein and Stalin which resulted in disfavor for the Soviet filmmaker in late 1940s. Scenes that involved Trotsky who after all was Stalin's enemy were cut from the picture. These scenes with Trotsky were later restored years after the death of Stalin. Sergei M Eisenstein was fortunate not to be part of the people including artists who were arrested and either excuted or serve long jail terms during the 1930s for mentioning the name of Trotsky. Eisenstein was a genius at puting together a film and understanding the importance of images to fit a theme. After making this film he made an attempt to make it in Hollywood which didn't pan out. He had trouble getting projects green lighted possibly to the fact that Sergei wanted to make his own films, his way and the studios wouldn't not let him do it. I find it amazing at how many great foreign filmmakers who failed finding a niche in Hollywood because of their refusal to do what the studios want. A poginolty directed motion picture with a breathtaking moment in the taking of the big palace. Some of the film's ideas are also present in Alexander Nevsky(1938). It builds on motifs and themes that were disscussed in Strike(1924). From 1927 onward, Sergei M Eisenstein would only make a handfull of films. Oktyabr/October(1924) is a masterful protrayal of a period in Russian which lead to bad times contary to hopes of many Soviet revolutionaries.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
The sad burlesque, 20 March 2008
Author:
Graham Greene from United Kingdom
Few films have this much bitterness, and few filmmakers have the
correct balance of passion and creative talent that Eisenstein had.
That is what makes this film such an important achievement in the
history of cinema.
Here, it is the notion of time and space that is at the forefront of
the director's concerns, utilising what artist Derek Jarman once dubbed
'a way of viewing the past by way of the present' in order to recreate
the 1917 revolution; complete with thousands of extras and a never
before seen approach to scene layering and editorial juxtaposition.
Eisenstein himself had set the bar for this kind of thing with the
much-imitated Battleship Potemkin (1925), though the experimentation
here is much more revolutionary, what with the combined number of cuts,
the constant switch between camera angles and location, and also in the
repetition of montage.
This was all new when first released, and it still seems fresh today.
Others have mentioned the debt that filmmakers like Jean Luc Godard,
Nicolas Roeg and Steven Soderbegh owe to this kind of editing. Godard,
Resnais, Roeg and Cammell all attempted to elaborate on the cinematic
notions of this film, though you could perhaps argue that they failed
to attach their creativity to a story with this much emotional
resonance. Who cares if the underlining political and historical
accuracy are true to the time? If we are willing to forgive Eisenstein
for breaking narrative continuity then why do so many viewers refuse to
disengage from cinematic distortions of reality?
This is a notion made all the more impressive due to the
documentary-like nature of the film, and the raw aggression that the
filmmaker gets from his extras. Here it is the contrast between what we
view as real and what we know to be a façade that really tugs at the
heartstrings. Surely the massacre and the image of the slaughtered
horse dangling lifelessly from the toll bridge is one of the saddest
scenes in the history of film; again, because of the film's roots in
reality and the passion of the filmmakers.
October isn't just a film; it's a continuation in the growth of film as
an artistic medium. It's also a wonderful, though often shattering
story that should be seen by all; definitely a film that works on an
emotional level, as opposed to the psychological.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
An Exciting Portrayal of a Tumultuous Time, 23 March 2004
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
With detailed and interesting settings, carefully planned montages and other
techniques, plenty of realistic action, and an obvious enthusiasm of the
director for the subject, this is an exciting portrayal of a tumultuous
time. It's well-crafted, and the pace never lags. Each scene is so
realistic and interesting that it gives you a definite feeling of having
been there in the summer and fall of 1917, watching history
unfold.
The movie leaves no doubt as to its perspective, but aside from a few
overstated opinions in the titles, it rarely seems forced or heavy-handed.
This really was a time filled with many tensions, high emotions, and sudden
changes, and its portrayal of these is thoroughly believable. If anything,
it probably distorts and stylizes history rather less than do the vast
majority of the 'historical' movies that are made in the present era. The
film does also assume that you know a certain amount of the background to
the events that it depicts (background that its intended audience would
certainly have known well), and anyone who does not remember the main
figures and issues would probably enjoy the movie more after a brief review
of the history. But it would hardly be necessary to know everything, since
the story is told with such skill and detail.
There are many specific details that could be praised, and many sequences
that are especially absorbing. It's a movie that deserves to be seen, and
not just by those of us who are interested in silent films and history. In
terms of history, later events called into question many of the assumptions
and motivations behind the events and characters depicted in "October". But
in terms of cinema, it cannot be questioned that this is an excellent
film.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Refined but difficult., 12 October 2005
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Author:
Polaris_DiB from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Rating and reviewing movies like these are often difficult for the
average critic. On one hand, they're done absolutely brilliantly done
in ways that take one's breath away; on the other hand, how much credit
can you give to a movie that is pure propaganda, especially propaganda
for something the reviewer doesn't agree with? This "realistic
re-enactment" of the events of October 25th, 1917, is actually anything
but realism. Instead, it is a harrowing and amazing Romantic
experience. This is not to say it's bad--it's brilliant! The direction
and editing on this film are much more refined than Eisenstein's
previous and much-more-heralded film, Brenonsets Potyemkin (Battleship
Potemkin), and it has a whole lot more symbolism and focus on literary
devices. His fast-paced cutting is not as disjunctive as previously;
instead, it works to shock the viewer with the juxtapositions. I don't
think I shall ever get the quick back-and-forth cutting between that
one soldier's face and the firing machine gun ever out of my mind. It's
just that powerful.
This movie is so good, in fact, that it makes me proud to be a
Bolshevik... and I'm not, not in any way or form! How's that for being
a powerful, well-done movie? The Birth of a Nation didn't effectively
make me proud to be a Klansman, for a comparison...
Because of its intense political alignment, I can't see everyone
appreciating this film. There will always be those out there who say,
"Ah, it's only Communist propaganda" (which is right) "so it's not even
worth watching..." (which is wrong). For those who are looking for a
magnificent cinematic experience, however, this movie is a fine choice
indeed.
--PolarisDiB
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Interesting documentary-like film about the Soviet Revolution, 10 August 2006
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This film is highly reminiscent of Eisenstein's later work, POTEMKIN,
in that it looks like like a typical historical film but more like a
re-creation of the events--much like a documentary. However, like
POTEMKIN, it too is a very politically driven propaganda film. While
most of the moments on film are pretty realistic, Eisenstein and
Alexandropov also intersperse little scenes that portray the Communists
as noble peasants and the Kerensky government as patently evil. While
depicting the Czarist regime that preceded the Kerensky government as
evil is pretty accurate, the story of Kerensky isn't quite that cut and
dry. While he did create his own downfall due to the foolish decision
to continue the war against Germany after the May Revolution (the
non-Communist revolution of 1917 that sought reforms and forced the
czar to abdicate), Kerensky and his men weren't quite the evil pigs
they were depicted as in the film. But, of course, considering the
October Communist Revolution was still recent history when the film was
made, this sort of hyperbole is rather understandable. Plus, given the
control exercised over the Soviet film industry, it is doubtful that
Kerensky and his cronies could have been depicted any other way.
Particular standouts in the film are the interesting and very
imaginative camera-work as well as the brisk pace and realism of the
film. About the only negatives (other than the way they depicted the
Kerensky government) were the excessive use of some footage to make a
simple point--such as showing men scrambling out of a doorway again and
again and again to let the audience know people are pouring into a room
or returning to the same shot repeatedly. At the time, this was pretty
forgivable and normal, but today it appears, at times, like it could
have used a bit tighter editing.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Rooskies and Limeys, 30 December 2001
Author:
tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Spoilers herein.
Its all in the rhythm.
If you watch this on DVD, turn off the sound. They've added a Shostokovich
score with the best of intentions. The music is Russian and neoromantic, but
the film is not. Instead, it carries the tone of fabricated realities in the
way it folds time in petty ways.
It is subversive: apparently with chaotic underpinnings but instead with a
deeply intellectual, antiprole eye. (`We must master the Lenin-Stalin method
of perceiving reality and history ...') Since the heroism is so exaggerated
it is thus reduced, even given the time.
And time is what is manipulated here, in pretty radical fashion. Small
shuffles back and forth of the same sequence often with radical shifts in
perspective; recurrence of a prior image in a new context; heavy use of
incongruous inanimate objects in contrast to motion (today, that would be
slomo or zipps); a very studied rhythm of motion and perspective....
Consider this: the Soviet State is dead, less than a century later. But film
-- especially the notions of film espoused here -- may live eons longer. I
suspect that the notions of open vision established here are inherently
democratizing, so the propagandistic nature of his films is
irrelevant.
(The title of this comment refers to the only major living filmmaker (I
know) who would use this petty folding of time so: Soderbergh in `The
Limey.' Many have copied the lighting and angles, most shamelessly Spielberg
in his Schindler faces.)
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