Artigo Revisado por pares

Blockbuster History in the New Russia: Movies, Memory, and Patriotism by Stephen M. Norris (review)

2015; Volume: 45; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1548-9922

Autores

James H. Krukones,

Tópico(s)

Soviet and Russian History

Resumo

Blockbuster History in the New Russia: Movies, Memory, and Patriotism Stephen M. Norris. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2012. $90 cloth, $35 paper, xv, 388 pp.The basic subject of this engaging book is film in the years, that is, the first decade of the twenty-first century. Following the collapse of the film industry in the 1990s, filmmakers began resorting to American moviemaking techniques-big budgets, gargantuan sets, computer-based special effects, and wall-to-wall action-to create narratives focused on various aspects of the and Soviet past. The result was the blockbuster, an often profitable box-office enterprise that tapped into dormant reserves of nationalist feeling while attracting the attention, and sometimes the support, of the Putin government. In other words, what begins as a story about the movies turns into a thoughtprovoking account of contemporary Russia. That story is well told by Stephen Norris, already known for his expertise in interpreting visual history.One of the attractive features of Norris's book is his largely successful attempt to make each of the chapters a self-standing unit that often centers on a particular film or film genre while also exploring other aspects of Russia's media culture, including the multiplex and video store. An early chapter, for example, deals with The Barber of Siberia (1998), an expensive epic whose late Imperial setting allowed director Nikita Mikhalkov to craft a valentine to the pre-Soviet era at the same time that he began dabbling in contemporary politics. As described by Norris, the film provided the script for the patriotic culture of the zero years (47). Mogul Karen Shakhnazarov likewise mounted large-scale productions set in prerevolutionary times as part of his campaign to rebuild Mosfilm, the mammoth studio that had dominated Soviet filmmaking prior to 1991. Shakhnazarov's success caused Putin to take film more seriously as a tool of political strategy and, not coincidentally, to open state coffers to Mosfilm. That the producer's films lionized the battle against terrorism during the tsarist era could not have been lost on a government desperate to generate popular support for its campaign against non-Russian subversives. Filmmakers also dealt more directly with the Soviet period. In 2006, for instance, a miniseries based on Doctor Zhivago sought to capture the true essence of Pasternak's novel, eschewing the romantic approach of earlier, Western versions and deploying a background score by the estimable Eduard Artem'ev-the Russian John Williams, according to Norris (94)-that drew its inspiration from the Orthodox liturgy to create a requiem for the revolution. Filmmakers also returned in earnest to the Second World War, that most formative of Soviet experiences. The new movies, however, included tropes that distinguished them from the war films of the past, depicting Soviet officers as indifferent to the loss of their own troops as well as Germans as fellow victims. The Soviet experience in Afghanistan received blockbuster treatment in Fedor Bondarchuk's Ninth Company (2005), but the director's critical approach, which essentially equated Soviet intervention to the earlier U. …

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