Blockade

(festivaalin nimi)

Juonikuvaukset(1)

The siege of Leningrad has become one of the legends of the 2nd World War. It lasted 900 days, and it was not until the 1st of March 1944 that the enemy stranglehold on the city with its several million inhabitants relaxed. The city was constantly bombarded, faced hunger and freezing temperatures, but its people kept on working and adjusted their lives to the situation. The film is compiled from authentic news footage. Individual shots have been grouped in thematic passages about various different aspects of the reality of the siege. The director has added no commentary, and his reanimation of the past is based only on the image and evocation through sound. The film thus gets behind the legend to the real life of people in inhuman conditions, which made everyday existence a struggle for survival in the face of the constant presence of death. The sense that the audience has of living through the events derives from both the immediacy of the images and the rhythmic arrangement of the material, which includes hitherto unused footage of the blockade. (Karlovy Vary International Film Festival)

(lisää)

Arvostelut (1)

Dionysos 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Loznica films do not want to say anything - they simply show it. And yet they are able to shout their message to the world. The USSR/Russia had and still has special luck with the montage documentary genre: Esfir Shub invented it in the 1920s and eighty years later Loznica proves its power even for a 21st century documentary with artistic ambitions. At the same time, yesterday and today, the manipulative power that the director holds is demonstrated. Shub was already able to direct the viewer's understanding of historical events through editing and commentary intertitles. Loznica also pushes the perception of the recorded material but through a different medium - sound. Sound, or rather how it is missing in many moments, or how it is lazy, muted, how it rarely but urgently attacks, and how it evokes a strange frozen atmosphere in the viewer. It is as if even the sound was slowly starving and no longer had the strength to shout or scream - like in weeklies from the war, like in war movies, and like in second-rate documentaries, where the same images appear anyway. Or in the case when Loznica pulls them out of the (silence) archive after sixty years and gives them a voice - but a muted, waiting, resigned voice, perfectly opposite to the normal lively city. That is far more impressive than any shot of lying dead bodies. ()

Kuvagalleria (9)