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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV042034892
    Format: 1 DVD, PAL, Ländercode 2, 59 Min., farb., stereo , Beih. (44 S.) , 12 cm
    ISBN: 9783863849177
    Series Statement: Palace editions
    Uniform Title: Pobeda nad solncem
    Content: "...'Victory Over the Sun' was the product of a collaboration between Cubist artists and Futurists poets in its original 1913 production... The nonsense, or 'transense' language of the libretto, and the abstract, geometric costumes and set designs shocked and delighted the 1913 audience. The librettists, Kruchenykh and Khlebnikov, were developing a poetic language they called in Russian ''zaum'' - beyond reason. Logical, conventional syntax and grammar were sacrificed to pure sound and abstract verbal imagery... Malevich's designs for the sets and costumes gave brilliant visual expression to the poets' convictions. He, too, completely rejected realism in favor of pure geometric line. The backdrops are a series of black and white drawings in squares and diagonals. He also designed the elaborate and strikingly 'modern' lighting. Critics agree upon the significance of 'Victory Over the Sun' as visual art, but the music has received little attention. It was long believed that only 20 measures had survived... However, a large portion of Matiushin's original music suddenly resurfaced 1982 in the Pushkin House in Leningrad... What so excited audiences in St. Petersburg and in Los Angeles was the strongly visual character ... Indeed, 'opera' is a misleading label for this prescient piece; it has much more in common with recent developments in performance art and rock music than with Boris Godunov or Madama Butterfly. R. Benedetti, a member of the faculty of the School of Theater at the California Institute of the Arts, directed 'Victory Over the Sun' in its Los Angeles reincarnation in 1980. The production was repeated ... in a revised version at the Berlin Festival in September 1983..." [nytimes.com]
    Note: Orig.: Russland, 1913 , Reconstructed at the Moscow Stas Namin Theatre of Music and Drama 2013 in collaboration with the Russian Museum. - Enth. d. Prolog von Velimir (Victor) Khlebnikov, sowie e. histor. Orig.-Aufn. mit A. Kruchenykh. - Das Beih. enth. e. Einf. v. Evgenia Petrova mit Lit.verz., den engl. Text d. Prologs, d. engl. Übers. d. Librettos, Bemerkungen. d. Übers. , Russ. mit engl. Untertiteln
    Language: Russian
    Keywords: Kručenych, Aleksej Eliseevič 1886-1968 Pobeda nad solncem ; Malevič, Kazimir 1878-1935 ; Matjušin, Michail V. 1861-1934 ; DVD-Video
    Author information: Namin, Stas 1951-
    Author information: Malevič, Kazimir 1878-1935
    Author information: Kiblickij, Iozef ca. 20. Jh.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    [London] : New Wave Films
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    UID:
    b3kat_BV046037494
    Format: 2 DVD-Videos (52 min + 83 min + 60 min) , 12 cm
    Edition: 2 discs
    Series Statement: New wave films 053
    Content: Blockade: The longest siege during World War II was that of Leningrad, which lasted for 900 days, from September 1941 to January 1944, when Hitler attempted to starve the Soviet city of three million people into submission. Estimates of the number of residents who died from starvation, disease or cold range from 641,000 to 800,000. Consisting of solely of rarely seen footage found in Soviet film archives, Blockade vividly re-creates those momentous events, featuring a meticulously reconstructed, state-of-the-art soundtrack added to the original black-and-white silent footage
    Content: Revue: In Revue, Sergei Loznitsa researched footage from the 1950s and 1960s, selecting excerpts from newsreels, propaganda films, TV shows and feature films that present a portrait - in images - of Soviet life during the same period. The film's fascinating flow of disparate scenes representing a certain idea - and ideal - of Soviet life, appear, from today's perspective, as alternately poignant, funny, and tragic. The cumulative impact reveals a life of hardship, deprivation and seemingly absurd social rituals, but one always inspired by the vision, or illusion, of a communist dream
    Content: Landscape: Winter. People are waiting for a bus in the Russian town of Okulovka. They talk. Listening to their conversations, the viewer is immersed in the world they live in. United by the movement of the camera, the whole place and the people blend together. Reminiscent of the work of Michael Snow and of Chantal Akerman in D'Est (1992), Landscape is an absorbing documentary showing both the people waiting for a bus and the atmosphere of this wintry wait, the tensions and worries featured in discussions recorded separately from the image, resulting in a poignant and often funny documentary
    Note: Russisch - Untertitel: Englisch
    Language: Russian
    Keywords: Film ; DVD-Video
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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