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- <text id=89TT0979>
- <title>
- Apr. 10, 1989: Censors' Day Off
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 10, 1989 The New USSR
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 127
- CENSORS' DAY OFF
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As audiences cheer, filmmakers are ushering a May Day parade of
- social ills--and a little sex--onto the screen
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> Start with the happy ending. Like a song escaping from jaws
- long wired shut, the political voice of Soviet films is
- suddenly loud and clear. Did we say loud? Listen to the rock
- music that carpets the sound tracks. It drowns out everything
- but the angry shouts of the teen heroes, who sleep around and
- do drugs while aiming to be an amalgam of Elvis and Che. The
- revealing documentary Is It Easy to Be Young? portrays a
- generation given to graffiti and hooliganism. "I don't think
- about what will happen to me," says one young man, spiked hair
- framing a pocked face. "I don't particularly want to know...Hey,
- you just gotta enjoy yourself!" Goodbye, dialectical
- materialism. Hello, California pleasure principle.
- </p>
- <p> In Vasili Pichul's smash hit Little Vera, the kids look
- like Sunset Strip punks and act as if they'd just invented
- adolescent angst. Vera's dad is a drunken oaf, abusing the
- children who hate him yet cling to him and lie to protect him.
- He could be the petty dictator of a pre-Gorbachev regime, and
- his daughter the strident soul of rebellion. In her sharp,
- defiant voice, you can hear the sound of breaking glasnost.
- </p>
- <p> The filmmakers are no less rambunctious. Gone are the days
- when criticism of the system was voiced in picture parables so
- obscure they sometimes eluded the censors--and all but the
- most discerning audiences as well. Now everybody gets the
- point. Filmmakers are sending a May Day parade of social ills--class
- resentments, alcoholism, stifling bureaucracy, domestic
- brutality, a nationwide streak of malaise--past the cheers of
- public opinion. On the reviewing stand, Mikhail Sergeyevich
- smiles. After all, it's his party.
- </p>
- <p> Glasnost cinema is good news for Soviet citizens, who go to
- the movies four times as often as Americans and ten times as
- often as the British. Today Soviets get to watch sexual barriers
- fall like dominoes in slow motion. Little Vera features a love
- scene--82 seconds of topless necking and a quick tickle under
- Vera's dress--that has shot viewers' eyebrows up through their
- hairlines. By American cable-TV standards the episode might be
- tame, but in a culture as repressed erotically as it is
- politically, Little Vera is big news.
- </p>
- <p> In another sense, all Soviet cinema has become sexy, a
- novel commodity on the global culture market. Little Vera opens
- this month in the U.S., after playing the New Directors/New
- Films series at New York City's Museum of Modern Art in tandem
- with Boris Frumin's The Errors of Youth, shot in 1978 but just
- completed this year. Eleven Soviet filmmakers are touring the
- U.S. with Glasnost Film Festival, whose 22 documentaries include
- robust exposes on Chernobyl, the Armenian revolt and the war in
- Afghanistan.
- </p>
- <p> But does freer mean better? Can liberalism guarantee
- artistry? Alas, no. Nor are today's Soviet films likely to be
- superior to those of the first flush of revolution. Now that the
- specter of Stalinism has receded, another shadow haunts Soviet
- filmmakers, and it may be harder to escape. This is the legacy
- of Sergei Eisenstein, V.I. Pudovkin, Alexander Dovzhenko and
- Dziga Vertov, the giants of Soviet silent cinema. Their works
- (October, Mother, Earth, Man with a Movie Camera) remain at the
- core of every film curriculum; movies are still made in the
- visual language they helped invent.
- </p>
- <p> Don't expect some 21st century director to filch a scene
- from Little Vera the way David Lean, Brian De Palma and others
- have quoted the Odessa Steps sequence from Eisenstein's
- Potemkin. For one thing, critical realism, the style of most
- glasnost films, eschews the bold editing effects and pristine
- iconography of the Soviet silents. But style is subordinate to
- message just now: the priority is journalism, not art. To U.S.
- eyes, the rebels without a cause in an alienated-teen drama like
- Valeri Ogorodnikov's The Burglar are a sight as nostalgic as
- Hula-Hoops. But in the U.S.S.R. these films play like bulletins
- from the front lines. So for audiences at home and abroad, the
- excitement of Soviet movies is not so much in their quality as
- in their very existence.
- </p>
- <p> This is no small triumph, considering the sorry history of
- repression exercised by Goskino, the state censorship board.
- For any reason or none, Goskino could cut a scene, ban a film,
- put a director out of work or put him in jail. Sergei
- Paradjanov, a lyric poet in the Dovzhenko mold, spent nearly
- four years in prison. Andrei Tarkovsky, the greatest Soviet
- director since Eisenstein, filmed Andrei Rublev in 1966; the
- complete version was not shown publicly in the U.S.S.R. until
- 1987, just after Tarkovsky died in exile. Alexander Askoldov's
- The Commissar, filmed in 1967, was accused of "Zionist
- tendencies" and suppressed for 20 years; Askoldov has yet to
- make another movie. Erakli Kvirikadze made his satire of
- Stalinism, The Swimmer, in 1981, but a crucial scene was deleted
- until 1987. The director stashed the offending footage in his
- refrigerator and waited.
- </p>
- <p> Now comes the thaw, and the index of once prohibited films
- has become an honor roll. Enforced neglect has turned their
- directors into celebrities, legendary fighters in the film
- resistance. Frumin, who immigrated to the U.S. after The Errors
- of Youth, a bleak road movie, was shelved a decade ago, returned
- to Leningrad last year to finish editing the film. Elem Klimov,
- a tenacious renegade whose own films (the historical drama
- Agony, the peasant-revolt parable Farewell) have been censored
- and suppressed, is the union's first secretary, unlocking vaults
- and disarming the Goskino octopus. For the first time, a
- filmmaker runs the country's movie industry. Not only have the
- insurgents stormed the winter palace, they are sitting pretty
- in it.
- </p>
- <p> The danger is in believing Klimov and his colleagues can
- produce an ideal creative climate. But Soviet filmmakers know
- not to expect too much. In Vyacheslav Krishtofovich's poignant
- comedy Lonely Woman Searching for a Life Companion, a seamstress
- places a personal ad on walls around her town. The results are
- dire. The first man to answer the ad insults her, tries to rob
- her and then leeches on her kind nature. A trio of Young
- Pioneers, encouraged to take pity on the "sick and the lonely,"
- offers to take her for walks in the countryside. She nearly
- loses her job. She never finds Comrade Right. But in the last
- shot, her neighbor is tiptoeing down a night street, slapping
- her own ads on the walls.
- </p>
- <p> The first single woman is the Soviet moviemaker of
- yesterday, whose failed struggle made the new freedom possible.
- Her neighbor is today's film artist, whose pictures are as
- artless as a cry for help and as urgent as the dream of a better
- future. It would be nice if the U.S.S.R. could produce a few
- masterpieces, as it did 60 years ago. But happy endings are,
- after all, the stuff of movies, not moviemaking. And what Soviet
- filmmaker would dare hope for more than a resolute beginning?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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