A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z   Sitemap  
AllStarPics Statistics
Galleries:
Pictures:
Comments:
14,686 [NEW]

You are here: Pics  >  Sergei M. Eisenstein Pics (11 pics of Sergei M. Eisenstein)

Sergei M. EisensteinSergei M. EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei Eisenstein (Paris, 1929)Sergei M. Eisenstein Sergei EisensteinSergei M. Eisenstein Sergei Eisenstein

Sergei M. Eisenstein Pics

Sergei M. Eisenstein
VIEWS:402
  VOTES:0
star rating
RATE   Yes No

Sergei M. Eisenstein Snapshot


First Name
Sergei

Last Name
Eisenstein

Middle Name
M.

Height
67

Place of Birth
Riga, Russian Empire (now Latvia)

Star Sign
Aquarius

Date of Death
11 February 1948

Place of Death
Moscow, Soviet Union

Cause of Death
Heart Attack

Claim to Fame
Battleship Potemkin (1925)

Gender
Male

Nationality
Russian

Wikipedia Text

Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (Russian: ; January 23, 1898 – February 11, 1948) was a pioneering Soviet Russian film director and film theorist, often considered to be the "Father of Montage." He is noted in particular for his silent films Strike (1924), Battleship Potemkin (1925) and October (1927), as well as the historical epics Alexander Nevsky (1938) and Ivan the Terrible (1944, 1958). His work profoundly influenced early filmmakers owing to his innovative use of and writings about montage.


Couple Profile
The father of montage, Russia`s Sergei Eisenstein was one of the principal architects of the modern cinematic form. Despite a relatively small ouevre of only seven completed films, most if not all of which suffered under the weight of communist intrusion, few individuals were more instrumental in enabling motion pictures to evolve beyond their origins in 19th century Victorian theater into a new arena of abstract thought and expression. While later criticized for the strong currents of propaganda coursing through his work, the continuing influence of Eisenstein`s films is, regardless of politics, undeniable; a master of metaphor and allusion, he brought to the medium a new depth of power and complexity. Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein was born January 23, 1898, in Riga, Latvia. The child of an affluent architect, he studied at the Institute of Civil Engineering in Petrograd, and in the wake of the 1917 revolution he began working as an engineer for the Red Army. By the early `20s, he had become the set designer of Vsevolod Meyerhold`s Moscow Proletkult Theater, later graduating to the position of director; there he learned the principles of "bio-mechanics," or conditioned spontaneity. Eisenstein`s interest in film began with an appreciation of the work of D.W. Griffith, whose editing style influenced him in the production of his first cinematic endeavor, the 1923 five-minute newsreel parody Dnevnik Glumova. A stint with Lev Kuleshov`s film workshop followed, as did an increasing fascination with the burgeoning avant-garde. With his feature debut, 1924`s Stachka, Eisenstein introduced a new kind of film language, dubbed "montage." Expanding upon Meyerhold`s theory of bio-mechanics, montage consisted of a sequence of conflicting images which served to abbreviate time spans and overlap symbolic meanings, with the cumulative emotional effect of a scene greater than the sum of its parts. Theorizing that it worked in a fashion similar to the dialectic of Karl Marx, Eisenstein sought to use the montage technique to make films for the common man; in the film`s most memorable sequence, a group of factory workers are shot down, with the scenes of their deaths intercut with the depiction of cattle at the slaughter — parallel images trading on the emotional impact of each other to heighten their combined impact. Eisenstein`s second film, 1925`s massively influential Battleship Potemkin, further honed the montage concept. The much-imitated "Odessa Steps" sequence, in particular, proved so powerful that many audiences believed they were viewing actual newsreel footage, prompting a pleased Eisenstein to label himself an "illusionist." For the follow-up, he was commissioned to direct 1927`s Oktiabr in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the October Revolution. Communist officials, already wary of the impact of his work on audiences, forced Eisenstein to temper his montage style, although the film clearly remains the product of his distinctive vision. Generalnaya Liniya, his final silent film, premiered in 1929. At the dawn of the 1930s, Eisenstein was sent to Europe and the U.S. to research the sound-film phenomenon. Greeted by the global movie community as a great hero, he was befriended by the likes of Albert Einstein, Abel Gance, Charlie Chaplin, Walt Disney, and his hero, D.W. Griffith. Encouraged by documentary pioneer Robert Flaherty to explore Latin America during his journey, he shot Que Viva Mexico in 1930 with the financial assistance of writer Upton Sinclair. Upon completing the principal photography, Eisenstein sent the completed footage to Russia, where it was intercepted by government officials and removed from the director`s control. In 1932, Eisenstein was named a scholar of the Moscow film school, where he wrote a number of essays about montage and motion picture direction which were later published in book form. In 1935 he began filming Bezhin Lug, but the screenplay`s bitter political commentary brought the wrath of Party officials, who shut down production prior to the picture`s completion. Only by submitting to a public apology was he allowed to begin work on 1938`s Aleksandr Nevsky, an attack on Nazi Germany later withdrawn from distribution after Josef Stalin signed a 1939 non-aggression pact with Adolf Hitler. In 1945, Ivan Grozny I, the first film in a projected trilogy documenting the life and times of the notorious 16th century czar, appeared to great acclaim within the Soviet Union; however, the second chapter`s 1946 completion was met with the furor of Stalin, who so despised the picture that he effectively buried it until 1958. Ironically, Stalin nevertheless agreed to allow Eisenstein to film the trilogy`s conclusion, but health problems forced the director off of the project before it could be completed. Sergei Eisenstein died of a heart attack in Moscow on February 11, 1948.

Couple Profile Source
www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=2:88777

Count - Awards
1

Role ID
Director, Writer, Editor

Has Detailed Data (New)
1

Date of Birth
1898-01-23

Age
50

Sergei M. Eisenstein Picture Gallery




Sergei M. Eisenstein Movie and TV Show Credits

Share This on the Web


Post a Comment

Your Name:
Your Email:
This will not appear on the site
Message:


DISCLAIMER:
You are solely responsible for the comments and other content that you post. AllStarPics.Net accepts no responsibility whatsoever in connection with or arising from such content.

S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S5 | S6 | S7 | S8 | S9 | S10 | S11 | S12 | S13 | S14 | S15 | S16 | S17 | S18 | S19 | S20 | S21 | S22 | S23

Latest Site Comments

Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde Pics

Posted by Idris Adams 1 hour ago

hello how far omotola infact if atall i have my full time of being close to...

John Cena Pics

Posted by sailendra shrestha 1 hour ago

hi bro my son is only 6 year old & he him self like 2 say your younger brot...

William Levy Pics

Posted by skuzzy 2 hours ago

William Levy, i really admire you and what you do keep it up with the good ...

Kobe Bryant Pics

Posted by Uztad Norhasan H. Abdulrashid 3 hours ago

your so amazing player of this generation, i hope you will be the champion ...


Browse Movie Galleries

Popular Pics



Sergei M. Eisenstein Links


Related Galleries