BRONENOSETS POTEMKIN
Featuring Aleksandr Antonov / Vladimir Barsky / Grigori V. Aleksandrov
A fixture in the critical canon almost since its premiere, Sergei Eisenstein’s film about a 1905 naval mutiny was revolutionary in both form and content.
“Even now I feel again the emotion it aroused in all of us. When we left the theatre, we started erecting barricades ourselves. The police had to intervene before we would stop.”
Luis Buñuel, My Last Sigh, 1982
Declared the greatest film of all time at the 1958 Brussels World’s Fair and one of only two films to have appeared on all of Sight & Sound’s critics’ polls (1952–2002), Battleship Potemkin has also been widely censored, as much out of fear of the perceived influence of its ideas as for any contentious material on screen.
In essence, it tells a five-part story of a naval mutiny leading to full-blown revolution, but while this material could be crudely propagandist in other hands, Eisenstein uses images of such dynamic compositional strength and editing of such frame-perfect precision that it’s hard not to be swept along, regardless of personal politics. Despite endless quotation and parody, the set-piece massacre on the Odessa Steps still packs a sledgehammer punch.
Other hugely influential Soviet films of the silent era – of which there are many – include The Man with a Movie Camera (1929) and Earth (1930).
Cast & credits
Cast
- Vakulinchuk, sailor Aleksandr Antonov
- Captain Golikov Vladimir Barsky
- Lieutenant Guiliarovsky Grigori V. Aleksandrov
- Matushenko, sailor Mikhail S. Gomorov
- petty officer Aleksandr I. Levchin
- officer Marussov
- conscript I. Bobrov
- woman with pig Julia Eisenstein
- woman with pram Beatrice Vitoldi
- Aba, boy killed on steps A. Glauberman
- Aba's mother Propkopenko
- sailor with no legs Korobei
- teacher with pince-nez N. Poltavtseva
- student Zerenin
- himself, Odessa revolutionary Konstantin Feldman
- antisemitic provocator Glotov
- woman on steps Repnikova
- cast member Maksim Straukh
- cast member Andrei Fait
Credits
Direction
- Director Sergei M. Eisenstein
- Co-director Grigori V. Aleksandrov
- Assistant Director Maksim Straukh
- Assistant Director Mikhail S. Gomorov
- Assistant Director Aleksandr I. Levchin
- Assistant Director Aleksandr Antonov
Production
- Production First Studio Goskino
- Production Manager Yakov Bliokh
- Supervisor (1930 Sound Version) Phil Jutzi
- Supervisor (1950 Sound Version) Sergei Kazenov
- Supervisor (1950 Sound Version) E. Kachkevitch
- Supervisor (1972 16mm Sound Version) Arthur Kleiner
- Supervisor (1976 Sound Version) Naum Kleiman
Writing
- Screenplay Sergei M. Eisenstein
- Dialogue (1930 Sound Version) Alois Johannes Lippl
- From the screenplay for '1905 God' by Nina Agadjanova
- From the screenplay for '1905 God' by Sergei M. Eisenstein
Photography
- Director of Photography Eduard Tissé
- Assistant Photographer Vladimir Popov
Editing
- Editor Sergei M. Eisenstein
Design
- Art Director Vasili Rakhals
Titles
- Intertitles Nikolai Asseyev
- Intertitles S.M. Tretiakov
Music
- Music (1926, based on themes by Bach) Sergei M. Eisenstein
- Music (1926; 1930 & 1972 Sound Versions) Edmund Meisel
- Music (1950 Sound Version) Nikolai Kriukov
- Music (1976 Sound Version) Dmitri Shostakovich
