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SL7: Soviet and Russian Cinema

This paper is available for the academic year 2025-26.

This course investigates the history of Soviet and Russian cinema from its beginnings in the early 20th century through the present : from early silent comedies and melodramas to the emergence of the avant-garde in the 1920s; from Stalinist blockbusters of the 1930s through the Soviet ‘New Wave’ of the 1960s;Ìýfrom the tumultuous changes of the ²µ±ô²¹²õ²Ô´Ç²õ³Ù’ era through the postmodern challenges of the present.ÌýThe paper encourages students to explore the work of one or more directors in depth, but it also asks students to think comparatively about the evolution of filmmaking practices, genres and themes across historical periods and political changes.ÌýThis course is open to students in both Part IB and Part II;Ìýit does not assume any prior study of film, but students are expected to read a wide range of critical, historical and theoretical texts (in both English and Russian) as essential context for the films under discussion.

Topics: 

1)Ìý Revolutionary Film Culture:ÌýFrom Boulevard to Avant-Garde

This topic traces the emergence of Soviet avant-garde cinema from pre-revolutionary popular filmmaking in films by Evgenii Bauer (Grezy), Sergei Eisenstein (Stachka), Iakov Protazanov (Aelita), Lev Kuleshov (Prikliucheniia Mistera Vesta v strane Bol’shevikov), Vsevolod Pudovkin (²Ñ²¹³Ù’), Grigorii Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg (Novyi Vavilon).

2) ÌýFrom Silence to Sound:ÌýSergei Eisenstein, Oleksandr Dovzhenko and Dziga Vertov

This module explores the work of the three major figures of the Soviet avant-garde, focusing on the ways in which each navigated the technological and political changes of the 1930s and 1940s. Films will be analysed in the context of each director's theoretical writings and contemporary critical debates. Works to be studied include Eisenstein’s Bronenosets Potemkin (1927) and Ivan Groznyi (1944-1946); the FEKS collective films Novyi Vavilon (1929) and Odna (1931); ÌýVertov’s Chelovek s kinoapparatom (1929) and Tri pesni o Lenine (1932).

3) The Other Soviet Classics:ÌýPopular Cinema in the Stalin Era

This module examines the ways in which Soviet filmmakers sought to ‘catch up and overtake’ Hollywood Ìýin the musicals, melodramas, romantic comedies and war films that were popular in the 1930s and 1940s.Ìý Filmmakers to be discussed include Vasil’ev Brothers (Chapaev), Grigorii Aleksandrov (Tsirk, Volga-Volga), Ivan Pyr’ev (Traktoristy), Mikhail Romm (Lenin v oktiabre), Semen Timoshenko Ìý(Nebesnyi tikhokhod), Mark Donskoi Ìý(±·±ð±è´Ç°ì´Ç°ù±ð²Ô²Ô²â±ð) and Mikhail Chiaureli (Padenie Berlina)

4)Ìý Soviet Cinema After Stalin:Ìý Rewriting the Past, Confronting the Present

​This module investigates the ways in which Soviet cinema rebelled against the thematic and stylistic constraints of the Stalin era in a range of extraordinary films released between 1957 and 1985. ÌýFilmmakers to be discussed includeÌý Mikhail Kalatozov (Letiat zhuravli), Marlen Khutsiev (Mne 20 let, ±õ³Ü±ô’s°ì¾±¾± dozhd’), Sergei Bondarchuk (Sud’ba cheloveka), Larisa Shepitko (°­°ù²â±ô’i²¹), Grigorii Chukhrai (Ballada o soldate), Kira Muratova (Korotkie vstrechi,Ìý Dolgie provody) and Andrei Tarkovskii (Ivanovo detstvo, Andrei Rublev)

5)Ìý Russian Cinema from Perestroika to the Present:

This module addresses the principal trends and figures in Russian filmmaking from the ²µ±ô²¹²õ²Ô´Ç²õ³Ù’ era through the present. Filmmakers to be discussed include Aleksei German (Moi drug Ivan Lapshin), Aleksei Balabanov (Brat, Gruz 200),Ìý Andrei Zviagintsev (Vozvrashchenie, Leviafan), ÌýKira Muratova (Astenicheskii sindrom, Nastroishchik), Vasilii Sigarev (Volchok), Aleksandr Sokurov (Krug vtoroi, Telets) and Sergei Loban (Shapito-Shou).

The course is supported by a Moodle site, where students will find links to learning resources, recommended readings and online versions of some films. Students who intend to take the course may contact the course convenor to request early enrolment in the site over the summer.

Preparatory reading: 

The best preparation for this paper is to watch as many Russian and Soviet films as possible over the summer. Works by all the directors listed above are available on DVD from the MMLL library.Ìý Many are also available on youtube.com in high quality copies that have been posted by the major Russian film studios. Recommended summer reading:

Bordwell, David and Thompson, Kristin. Film Art:Ìý An Introduction

Beumers, Birgit. A History of Russian Cinema.

Christie, Ian and Taylor, Richard (eds),Ìý The Film Factory:Ìý Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents, 1896-1939. London and NY: Routledge, 1994.

Tsivian, Yuri.Ìý Early Cinema in Russia and Its Cultural Reception

Widdis, Emma.ÌýVisions of a New Land: Soviet Film from the Revolution to the Second World War

Woll, Josephine. ÌýReal Images: Soviet Cinema and the Thaw

Condee, Nancy.ÌýThe Imperial Trace: Recent Russian Cinema

Full reading list

Please see SL7 Course Handbook for details.

Teaching and learning: 

Weekly lectures;Ìýweekly revision seminars andÌýfortnightly supervisions (10 in the course of the year).

For the SL.7 Moodle site, please see . The password can be collected from the paper coordinator.

Assessment: 

Assessment will be by a three-hour written examination. You will write three essays, at least one of which must be focused on the work of a single director, and at least one of which must be comparative across the works of at least two Russian, Soviet, and/or post-Soviet filmmakers.Ìý

Candidates for 1B can opt to be assessed for this paper via the Long Essay. Ìý

Ìý

Course Contacts: 
Prof Emma Widdis

Keep in touch

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