IMDb > Ménilmontant (1926)

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Release Date:
1926 (France) See more »
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(2 articles)
The Forgotten: Prison Break
 (From MUBI. 14 March 2012, 8:35 PM, PDT)

The Forgotten: The One-Man Band
 (From MUBI. 19 January 2012, 5:59 AM, PST)

User Reviews:
Disorientating visual poetry See more (13 total) »

Cast

  (in credits order)
Nadia Sibirskaïa ... Younger Sister
Yolande Beaulieu ... Older Sister
Guy Belmont ... Young Man
Jean Pasquier
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Maurice Ronsard
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Directed by
Dimitri Kirsanoff 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Dimitri Kirsanoff 

Produced by
Dimitri Kirsanoff .... producer
 
Cinematography by
Léonce Crouan 
Dimitri Kirsanoff 
 
Film Editing by
Dimitri Kirsanoff 
 

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Additional Details

Runtime:
Argentina:38 min (Buenos Aires Festival Internacional de Cine Independiente) | USA:38 min
Country:
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 See more »
Sound Mix:
Certification:

Did You Know?

Trivia:
Pauline Kael said this was her favorite film of all time.See more »

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5 out of 9 people found the following review useful.
Disorientating visual poetry, 6 December 2008
Author: ackstasis from Australia

Dimitri Kirsanoff, born in Estonia but operating mostly in Paris, was heavily influenced by the theories of Soviet Montage. In his most famous short film, 'Ménilmontant (1926)' – still frightfully obscure in most circles – he adheres to this style strictly, almost obsessively. His preference towards a brisk editing pace carries a unique vitality that is also seen in the work of Soviet masters Eisenstein and Vertov, who pioneered and perfected the technique of montage in the mid-to-late 1920s. But, nevertheless, I don't think it works quite as well here. 'The Battleship Potemkin (1925)' and 'The Man with the Movie Camera (1929) – perhaps the two most recognised works of Soviet montage – utilise their chosen editing style to full effect precisely because they place greater emphasis on the collective over the individual, in accordance with traditional Communist ideology. There is deliberately no emotional connection attempted nor made between the viewer and any individual movie character, for that would be contrary to the filmmaker's intentions (interestingly, however, the montage fell out of preference from the 1930s in favour of Soviet realism).

'Ménilmontant' falters because it strives to create an emotional connection with the characters (particularly the younger sister, played by Nadia Sibirskaïa), but Kirsanoff's chosen editing style continually keeps the audience at an arm's length. The closest he comes to true pathos is with the park-bench sequence, when an old man offers some bread and meat to the famished woman, delicately avoiding eye contact to preserve her dignity. Even in this scene, the montage style intrudes. A director like Chaplin (and I'm a romantic at heart, so he's naturally one of favourite filmmakers) would have placed the camera at a distance, framing the profiles of both the woman and the old man within the same shot, thus capturing the subtle emotions and inflections of both parties simultaneously. Kirsanoff somewhat confuses the scene, cutting sequentially between the woman, the man and the food in a manner that reduces a simple, poignant act of kindness into a technical exercise in film editing. It works adequately, of course, a precise demonstration of the Kuleshov Effect, but there's relatively little heart in it.

But we'll cease with my complaints hereafter. I know my own film tastes well enough to recognise that what I disliked about the film – its emotional distance, for example – represents precisely what others love about it. There's no doubting that the photography (when it's kept on screen long enough) is breathtakingly spectacular, making accomplished use of lighting, shadows and in-camera optical effects such as dissolves, irises and superimpositions. There are touches of the surreal. Kirsanoff cuts non-discriminately forwards in time, backwards and into his characters' dreams, fragmenting time and reality into a series of shattered images, their individual meanings obscure until considered sequentially as in the pieces of a puzzle. Most impressive, I thought, was how several shots captured the linear perspective of roads and alleys, watching his characters gradually depart into the distance as though merely following the predetermined pathways of their future. The film ends exactly as it begins – with a bloody and unexplained murder – suggesting the inevitable cycle of human suffering, its causes unknown and forever incomprehensible.

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