「Grigorii Alexandrov」に関連した動画の一覧 |
![]() | Shining Path by Grigory Alexandrov 4.00 pm, 7 November, Saturday This Soviet Cinderella story, released in 1940, sees Lyubov Orlova at the peak of her career. It tells the story of Tanya, an uneducated, humble but hard-working peasant girl who comes to town and finds work as a cleaner in a textile factory. She is awarded the Order of Lenin, the highest Soviet decoration, and gradually ascends the political ladder, eventually being elected as deputy to the Supreme Soviet. Meanwhile, Lebedev, an engineer becomes director of the textile factory, has always been in love with Tanya. Meeting him at the opening of the All-Union agricultural exhibition, Tanya realizes that she loves him too. While this film puts forward the Soviet message of the rewards of ambition and motivation, musically it is also very pleasing. It shows Orlova at her best and in one scene audiences can enjoy watching her sing and work on 150 looms at the same time. 2009年10月20日再生回数 885 |
![]() | Circus by Grigory Alexandrov 4.00 pm, 8 November, Sunday A melodramatic comedy based on Under the Big Top by I. Ilf and E. Petrov. Set in the mid-30s, Marion Dikson, an American circus artist, flees the USA and the racism that she has endured for having a mixed-race son. Finding refuge and acceptance in the USSR, as her career takes off in a new, successful show, she meets new friends and falls in love. Ultimately she decides to stay in the USSR forever and the film climaxes with various Soviet ethnic groups singing a lullaby to her baby, in a display of Soviet cosmopolitanism. This film is an extraordinary combination of Busby Berkeley-style choreography, stunts and classic songs with a clear anti-US, agit-prop message. Many of the songs became instant Soviet classics. Chillingly, after Stalins anti-semitic campaign, the Yiddish verse was cut from lullaby sequence in the film. However, it was shown in its glorious entirety again after 1991. 2009年10月20日再生回数 2350 |
![]() | 1925 Battleship Potemkin (Aleksandr Antonov / Grigori Aleksandrov) Based on the historical events the movie tells the story of a riot at the battleship Potemkin. What started as a protest strike when the crew was given rotten meat for dinner ended in a riot. The sailors raised the red flag and tried to ignite the revolution in their home port Odessa. Cast Aleksandr Antonov ... Grigory Vakulinchuk - Bolshevik Sailor Vladimir Barsky ... Commander Golikov Grigori Aleksandrov ... Chief Officer Giliarovsky Ivan Bobrov ... Young Sailor Flogged While Sleeping (as I. Bobrov) Mikhail Gomorov ... Militant Sailor Aleksandr Levshin ... Petty Officer N. Poltavtseva ... Woman With Pince-nez Konstantin Feldman ... Student Agitator Prokopenko ... Mother Carrying Wounded Boy A. Glauberman ... Wounded Boy Beatrice Vitoldi ... Woman With Baby Carriage Brodsky ... Student Julia Eisenstein ... Woman with Food for Sailors Sergei M. Eisenstein ... Odessa Citizen Andrei Fajt ... Recruit (as A. Fait) Korobei ... Legless Veteran Marusov ... Officer Protopopov ... Old Man Repnikova ... Woman on the Steps Vladimir Uralsky Zerenin ... Student Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo ... Extra (uncredited) Directed By Sergei M. Eisenstein Intertitles Written By Nikolai Aseyev, Sergei Tretyakov, Sergei M. Eisenstein Script Written By Nina Agadzhanova Cinematography By Eduard Tisse, Vladimir Popov Film Editing By Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein Art Direction By Vasili Rakhals Assistant Director Grigori Aleksandrov Details Country: Soviet Union Release Date: December 1925 ... 2011年12月07日再生回数 2633 |
![]() | Frauennot - Frauenglück (1929) Eduard Tissé/Sergei Eisenstein/Grigory Alexandrov AKA Misery and Fortune of Woman 2012年03月11日再生回数 70 |
![]() | 3/7.STRIKE (1924) Sergei Eisenstein Produced by Boris Mikhin; Written by Grigori Aleksandrov/Ilya Kravchunovsky/ Sergei M. Eisenstein, and Valeryan Pletnyov. Cinematography Eduard Tisse. Strike (Russian: Стачка, translit. Stachka) is a 1925 silent film made in the Soviet Union by Sergei Eisenstein. It was Eisenstein's first full-length feature film, and he would go on to make The Battleship Potemkin later that year. It was acted by the Proletcult Theatre, and composed of six parts. It was in turn, intended to be one part of a seven-part series, entitled Towards Dictatorship (of the proletariat), that was left unfinished. Eisenstein's influential essay, Montage of Attractions was written between Strike's production and premiere. The film depicts a strike in 1903 by the workers of a factory in pre-revolutionary Russia, and their subsequent suppression. The film is most famous for a sequence near the end in which the violent putting down of the strike is cross-cut with footage of cattle being slaughtered, although there are several other points in the movie where animals are used as metaphors for the conditions of various individuals.[3] Another theme in the film is collectivism in opposition to individualism which was viewed as a convention of western film. Collective efforts and collectivization of characters were central to both Strike and Battleship Potemkin. Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (Russian: Сергей Михайлович Эйзенштейн Sergej Mihajlovič Ejzenštejn; January 23, 1898 -- February 11, 1948) was a ... 2011年07月27日再生回数 1221 |
![]() | Tsirk-El circo (Grigori Alexandrov, 1936). Títulos y secuencia inicial. Comienzo del célebre musical de Alexandrov con la secuencia de la persecución 2011年07月05日再生回数 149 |
![]() | Romance Sentimentale Part 1 Directors: Grigori Aleksandrov Sergei M. Eisenstein Writers: Grigori Aleksandrov (writer) Sergei M. Eisenstein (writer) In short, one of the landmark films in the development of avant garde cinema, ostensibly in the same Surrealist vein as Clair's "Entr'Acte," Cocteau's "Blood of a Poet" and Bunuel's "Un Chien Andalou" though with touches uniquely Eisenstein's. "Romance Sentimentale" set the stage for further experimentalist efforts, including the formal use of nature and contrapuntal sound. Interestingly, it was Eisenstein's only privately commissioned work, produced for the husband of the woman it features. 2009年11月18日再生回数 299 |
![]() | 4/7.STRIKE (1924) Sergei Eisenstein Produced by Boris Mikhin; Written by Grigori Aleksandrov/Ilya Kravchunovsky/ Sergei M. Eisenstein, and Valeryan Pletnyov. Cinematography Eduard Tisse. Strike (Russian: Стачка, translit. Stachka) is a 1925 silent film made in the Soviet Union by Sergei Eisenstein. It was Eisenstein's first full-length feature film, and he would go on to make The Battleship Potemkin later that year. It was acted by the Proletcult Theatre, and composed of six parts. It was in turn, intended to be one part of a seven-part series, entitled Towards Dictatorship (of the proletariat), that was left unfinished. Eisenstein's influential essay, Montage of Attractions was written between Strike's production and premiere. The film depicts a strike in 1903 by the workers of a factory in pre-revolutionary Russia, and their subsequent suppression. The film is most famous for a sequence near the end in which the violent putting down of the strike is cross-cut with footage of cattle being slaughtered, although there are several other points in the movie where animals are used as metaphors for the conditions of various individuals.[3] Another theme in the film is collectivism in opposition to individualism which was viewed as a convention of western film. Collective efforts and collectivization of characters were central to both Strike and Battleship Potemkin. Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (Russian: Сергей Михайлович Эйзенштейн Sergej Mihajlovič Ejzenštejn; January 23, 1898 -- February 11, 1948) was a ... 2011年07月27日再生回数 656 |
![]() | October 1917 - 1_11 - Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein & Dimitri Shostakovich.avi registroobrero.blogspot.com 2010年11月04日再生回数 4932 |
![]() | October 1917 - 4_11 - Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein & Dimitri Shostakovich_(HD).avi registroobrero.blogspot.com 2010年11月05日再生回数 1032 |









