Man with a Movie Camera
Brief Synopsis
In this silent documentary, a cameraman turns a day in the city into poetry.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Dziga Vertov
Director
Mikhail Kaufman
Pierre Henry
Music
Mikhail Kaufman
Cinematographer
Yelizaveta Svilova
Editor
Dziga Vertov
Screenwriter
Film Details
Also Known As
Chelovek S Kino-Apparatom, Chelovek S Kinoapparatom; Living Russia, Chelovek s kinoapparatom, Hombre de la camara, The, Man With the Movie Camera
Genre
Silent
Documentary
Drama
Educational
Experimental
Foreign
Historical
Political
Release Date
1929
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 20m
Synopsis
A cameraman travels the city with his movie camera, documenting the frenetic machinery of urban life.
Director
Dziga Vertov
Director
Cast
Mikhail Kaufman
Film Details
Also Known As
Chelovek S Kino-Apparatom, Chelovek S Kinoapparatom; Living Russia, Chelovek s kinoapparatom, Hombre de la camara, The, Man With the Movie Camera
Genre
Silent
Documentary
Drama
Educational
Experimental
Foreign
Historical
Political
Release Date
1929
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 20m
Articles
The Soviet Union Series - CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET UNION SERIES
Alexander Dovzhenko's EARTH, Vsevolod Pudovkin's THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG and his short film CHESS FEVER. The new edition of MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA and the triple-film DVD will prebook on April 15th, 2003, with a SRP of $29.95 on DVD and $24.95 on VHS. Both titles street on May 13th, 2003.
Russian and Soviet filmmakers had a central role in the development and establishment of film language; the concept of montage was born in Soviet land and filmmakers like Sergei Eisenstein (OCTOBER) and Lev Kuleshov (BY THE LAW) were the first ones to explore how the overall interpretation of a scene - and film - could change by small alterations in the ordering of shots. As a recognition of their legacy, the CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET UNION SERIES finally makes available, on VHS and DVD, four masterworks from three of the most revolutionary filmmakers in the history of world cinema.
MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA (BFI SPECIAL EDITION)
Regarded as one of the most important films in the evolving history of the moving image, Dziga Vertov's MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA is more than a groundbreaking look at the life of a cameraman¿and the proletariat - in the Soviet Union of the 1920s. Divided into nine orchestral-type movements, Dziga Vertov's masterpiece is a decisive move towards liberating cinema from narrative conventions and it is also considered as a cinematic landmark in the modernist debate on the relationship between art and reality.
Fighting against the bubbling industrialization of the medium and the monopoly of a narrative, Griffith-like employment of the cinematic apparatus, Vertov made MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA as a conscious attempt to find an "absolute language of cinema, based on the total separation from the language of theatre and literature." As a result, Vertov became part of the select group of filmmakers who were responsible for elevating cinema to the status of art.
This brand-new edition of MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA was commissioned - and re-mastered - by the British Film Institute (BFI), which cordially invited acclaimed composer and musicologist Michael Nyman to write a new score for this classic Soviet film. Famous for his minimalist work - Nyman was actually the first to apply the word "minimalism" to music - Michael Nyman has collaborated with filmmaker Peter Greenaway in 11 films (PROSPERO'S BOOK, A ZED AND TWO NOUGHTS), later working with Neil Jordan (THE END OF THE AFFAIR), Jane Campion (THE PIANO) and Volker Schlondorff (THE OGRE), among others.
For more information on the special features and the DVD edition of Vsevolod Pudovkin's THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG and his short film CHESS FEVER, visit Kino International.
The Soviet Union Series - CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET UNION SERIES
Kino on Video is proud to release, on VHS and DVD, the CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET UNION SERIES, which brings to the North-American market the acclaimed BFI edition of the seminal Soviet film, MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA, now with a brand-new score composed by Michael Nyman (THE PIANO, CARRINGTON). Also part of this series is a brand-new, triple-film DVD of some of the most celebrated works of world cinema:
Alexander Dovzhenko's EARTH, Vsevolod Pudovkin's THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG and his short film CHESS FEVER. The new edition of MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA and the triple-film DVD will prebook on April 15th, 2003, with a SRP of $29.95 on DVD and $24.95 on VHS. Both titles street on May 13th, 2003.
Russian and Soviet filmmakers had a central role in the development and establishment of film language; the concept of montage was born in Soviet land and filmmakers like Sergei Eisenstein (OCTOBER) and Lev Kuleshov (BY THE LAW) were the first ones to explore how the overall interpretation of a scene - and film - could change by small alterations in the ordering of shots. As a recognition of their legacy, the CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET UNION SERIES finally makes available, on VHS and DVD, four masterworks from three of the most revolutionary filmmakers in the history of world cinema.
MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA (BFI SPECIAL EDITION)
Regarded as one of the most important films in the evolving history of the moving image, Dziga Vertov's MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA is more than a groundbreaking look at the life of a cameraman¿and the proletariat - in the Soviet Union of the 1920s. Divided into nine orchestral-type movements, Dziga Vertov's masterpiece is a decisive move towards liberating cinema from narrative conventions and it is also considered as a cinematic landmark in the modernist debate on the relationship between art and reality.
Fighting against the bubbling industrialization of the medium and the monopoly of a narrative, Griffith-like employment of the cinematic apparatus, Vertov made MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA as a conscious attempt to find an "absolute language of cinema, based on the total separation from the language of theatre and literature." As a result, Vertov became part of the select group of filmmakers who were responsible for elevating cinema to the status of art.
This brand-new edition of MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA was commissioned - and re-mastered - by the British Film Institute (BFI), which cordially invited acclaimed composer and musicologist Michael Nyman to write a new score for this classic Soviet film. Famous for his minimalist work - Nyman was actually the first to apply the word "minimalism" to music - Michael Nyman has collaborated with filmmaker Peter Greenaway in 11 films (PROSPERO'S BOOK, A ZED AND TWO NOUGHTS), later working with Neil Jordan (THE END OF THE AFFAIR), Jane Campion (THE PIANO) and Volker Schlondorff (THE OGRE), among others.
For more information on the special features and the DVD edition of Vsevolod Pudovkin's THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG and his short film CHESS FEVER, visit Kino International.
Man With a Movie Camera
In order to use the cinematic apparatus to full advantage, Vertov experimented wildly with his camera, strapping it to motorcycles and to trains, using multiple exposure, time lapse photography, still imagery, dissolves, superimposition, and making the camera an obvious participant in what is being filmed. The film's attention to form angered Vertov's Soviet contemporaries like Eisenstein, who called it "purposeless camera hooliganism" and complained that his film work alienated a mass audience. But international audiences, and directors including Chaplin, Grierson, Godard and Vigo, were astounded and influenced by his radical vision.
But the continued disapproval of the Soviets affected Vertov's future in the industry. Vertov continued to make great films including the highly regarded Three Songs of Lenin (1934), which was nevertheless delayed in its release because Stalin was overlooked. Vertov's stature within the Soviet film industry slipped in the mid-1930s, as Lenin and the Soviet ideal crumbled under the influence of Stalin and bureaucracy.
Born Denis Arkadievitch Kaufman, the director and film theoretician adopted the name Dziga Vertov, meaning spinning top. Though he initially studied medicine, wrote poetry, and experimented with sound recording, after the Russian Revolution of 1917, Vertov became involved in film. As a member of the Russian avant-garde Vertov was a contemporary of Alexandr Rodchenko and Vladimir Mayakovsky and also linked to the futurist philosophy which celebrated machinery and dynamic movement. He became an editor and writer for first the Soviet newsreel group the Moscow Cinema Committee, and later worked under Lev Kuleshov on Kino-Nedelia (Cinema Weekly) a screen periodical, before moving into filmmaking.
Experimentation was always foremost for Vertov, who subtitled an early film (now lost) of fighting between the Red and White armies around the city of Tsaritsyn - Battle of Tsaritsyn (1920), "an experimental study." That film was also Vertov's first project with editor Elizaveta Ignat'evna Svilova, who would later become his wife.
Vertov's creation of the Kinopravda newsreels made him an early advocate of the power of documentary, 40 years before cinema verite came into existence. What he called "Life Caught Unawares," demanded an end to actors, sets, studios, scripts and other manifestations of the "bourgeois imagination." Of interest to Vertov and his disciples instead were "the ordinary people, filmed in everyday life and work."
Both of Vertov's brothers - Mikhail and Boris Kaufman - also worked in the film industry, with Mikhail going on to become a well-known cameraman on Vertov's films. Boris won an Oscar for his cinematography on Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront (1954) and earned critical praise for his work on other Hollywood films (The Fugitive Kind, 1959, The Pawnbroker, 1964).
Director: Dziga Vertov
Screenplay: Dziga Vertov
Cinematography: Mikhail Kaufman
Film Editing: Yelizaveta Svilova
Music: Pierre Henry, Nigel Humberstone, Konstantin Listov, Michael Nyman, Caleb Sampson.
BW-61m.
by Felicia Feaster
Man With a Movie Camera
A brilliant experiment into the possibilities of the camera, Dziga
Vertov's Man With a Movie Camera (1929) is a vital document of a time and place - a day in the life of Moscow. Running for
six reels without a single intertitle, the film visualizes the ordinary, from
passengers racing through the streets in horse drawn carriages and
factory workers, to the extraordinary, like a dramatic representation
of childbirth and a visible corpse in a funeral procession.
In order to use the cinematic apparatus to full advantage, Vertov
experimented wildly with his camera, strapping it to motorcycles and to
trains, using multiple exposure, time lapse photography, still imagery,
dissolves, superimposition, and making the camera an obvious
participant in what is being filmed. The film's attention to form
angered Vertov's Soviet contemporaries like Eisenstein, who called it
"purposeless camera hooliganism" and complained that his film work
alienated a mass audience. But international audiences, and directors
including Chaplin, Grierson, Godard and Vigo, were astounded and
influenced by his radical vision.
But the continued disapproval of the Soviets affected Vertov's future
in the industry. Vertov continued to make great films including the
highly regarded Three Songs of Lenin (1934), which was
nevertheless delayed in its release because Stalin was overlooked.
Vertov's stature within the Soviet film industry slipped in the
mid-1930s, as Lenin and the Soviet ideal crumbled under the influence
of Stalin and bureaucracy.
Born Denis Arkadievitch Kaufman, the director and film theoretician
adopted the name Dziga Vertov, meaning spinning top. Though he
initially studied medicine, wrote poetry, and experimented with sound
recording, after the Russian Revolution of 1917, Vertov became involved
in film. As a member of the Russian avant-garde Vertov was a
contemporary of Alexandr Rodchenko and Vladimir Mayakovsky and also
linked to the futurist philosophy which celebrated machinery and
dynamic movement. He became an editor and writer for first the Soviet
newsreel group the Moscow Cinema Committee, and later worked under Lev
Kuleshov on Kino-Nedelia (Cinema Weekly) a screen
periodical, before moving into filmmaking.
Experimentation was always foremost for Vertov, who subtitled an early
film (now lost) of fighting between the Red and White armies around the
city of Tsaritsyn - Battle of Tsaritsyn (1920), "an experimental
study." That film was also Vertov's first project with editor
Elizaveta Ignat'evna Svilova, who would later become his wife.
Vertov's creation of the Kinopravda newsreels made him an early
advocate of the power of documentary, 40 years before cinema verite
came into existence. What he called "Life Caught Unawares," demanded
an end to actors, sets, studios, scripts and other manifestations of
the "bourgeois imagination." Of interest to Vertov and his disciples
instead were "the ordinary people, filmed in everyday life and
work."
Both of Vertov's brothers - Mikhail and Boris Kaufman - also worked in the film industry, with Mikhail going on to become a well-known cameraman on Vertov's films. Boris won an Oscar for his cinematography on Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront (1954) and earned critical praise for his work on other Hollywood films (The Fugitive Kind, 1959, The Pawnbroker, 1964).
Director: Dziga Vertov
Screenplay: Dziga Vertov
Cinematography: Mikhail Kaufman
Film Editing: Yelizaveta Svilova
Music: Pierre Henry, Nigel Humberstone, Konstantin Listov, Michael Nyman, Caleb Sampson.
BW-61m.
by Felicia Feaster
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1929
silent
Released in United States 1929