Saturday, October 26, 2013

TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE -DIGITAL NEWSREEL #11

III.4. Dziga Vertov and Kino Eye:

 The stature of Flaherty’s contemporaries Dziga Vertov and his colleagues in the Soviet documentary movement has fared better in recent years, particularly after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the discovery of previously inaccessible films and written materials. Indeed, when it comes to Western recognition of the historical and artistic importance of Dziga Vertov, his work, and his theories, there appears to be a major re-evaluation in progress today.

 Why the importance of Vertov and his Kino Eye movement has been overlooked for so long by many Western documentary historians is a bit puzzling, particularly since Vertov’s contemporary and Soviet cinematic peer Sergei Eisenstein has long been the subject of adulation both as a filmmaker and theorist.

However, an investigation reveals several possible explanations.

 The first explanation is simply ideological.  Due to the economic dominance of the Anglophone world in the media world during the Twentieth Century, many Western cinema historians and critics persisted in ignoring the quality and  significance of the early Soviet documentary film in the development of documentary, dismissing the work of  Vertov and other Soviet artists as communist propaganda. However, while Vertov was indisputably an enthusiastic creator of propaganda for the Soviet revolution, the same might also be said of Sergei Eisenstein.

Since today both are recognized as great cinematic innovators, the answer must lie elsewhere.

Aside from their well  documented creative differences, there was one significant difference between Eisenstein and Vertov: Stalin’s personal interest in the Soviet film industry, which has also been well documented.  For many years, Eisenstein enjoyed Stalin’s blessing and support, and Vertov, who had been a favorite of Lenin’s, most certainly did not. Vertov had made many enemies in the 1920’s with his sweeping denunciations of dramatic cinema as a “bourgeois art form”, and the new climate gave his enemies a chance for revenge, and they took it.
Vertov was soon subjected to  withering ideological attacks by the communist party hierarchy; interestingly, he himself was not a member of the party.

As a result, during the 1930’s, Eisenstein’s major films were accessible in the West, and Vertov’s generally were not. The same was true of their writings.  Since there was no Cold War between East and West in the 1930’s, the official approval of the Communist Party, not to mention Stalin himself, was doubtless a blessing among Western intellectuals, rather than the curse it was to later become.

 The lion’s share of the blame for this flagrant historical oversight must belong to John Grierson himself, who stubbornly refused to ever acknowledge any cinematic debt to Vertov and his Kino Eye Manifesto. The record shows,” writes American documentary historian Jane M. Gaines,” that Grierson eschewed the Russians – was disinterested in Vertov and was not that deferential to Eisenstein. Basil Wright once said of Grierson that he ‘ never used the word revolution.”[1]

In other words, although Grierson seemingly shared the Soviet movement’s aesthetics and social engagement, he chose to downplay the relevance of Vertov’s theory and practice for his own documentary work. According to Russian cinema historian Jay Leyda, Grierson acknowledged only the famous Soviet feature director Sergei Eisenstein as an inspiration:” John Grierson’s work on the American version of “Potemkin” lends veracity to the story that the British documentary film movement was born from the last reel of “Potemkin”.[2]

 British film critic Ivor Montagu, a Grierson crony, handled the import of “The Man With the Movie Camera”, which was not shown in England until 1931.”[3]
 We now know that the film was not popular in the ruling Stalinist circles; Leyda informs us that Montagu was a frequent visitor to Moscow, ostensibly to find new films promote; however, we also now know that that Montagu was a Soviet spy during this period, so there are ample grounds for questioning his agenda .[4]

 After the first screenings in Paris and Stuttgart in 1929, Vertov’s film  received very enthusiastic responses from prominent European intellectuals, including cinema historian Siegfried Kracauer, who wrote,” Now a new Russian film has arrived in Berlin that proves that the Russians have not remained stuck at the level they have already reached…If Vertov’s film is more than simply an isolated case, then it must be regarded as symptomatic of the inroads universal human categories have made in Russia’s rigid political thinking. [5]

In contrast, when “The Man With the Movie Camera” was finally shown in England in 1931, Montagu compared it unfavorably to the work of Eisenstein and Pudovkin, and criticized it for being stylistically derivative of “Berlin: Symphony of a Great City” (1927) by German Walter Ruttman.   Grierson’s own evaluation of the film in print was not flattering. “The Man With The Movie Camera,” he wrote,” is in consequence not a film at all; it is a snapshot album. There is no story, no dramatic structure, and no special revelation of the Moscow it has chosen as a subject. It just dithers about on the surface of life picking up shots here and there, and everywhere, slinging them together as the Dadaists used to sling together their verses, with an emphasis on the particular which is out of relation to rational existence.”[6]

 Grierson was thus able to summarily dismiss Vertov’s aesthetic and ideological significance, as well as the relevance of Kino Eye for the fledgling British documentary movement. As British cinema historian Jeremy Hicks noted recently,” For Grierson, Vertov’s film is all record, and no art. Therefore, in his terms, it is not documentary.”[7]

Whatever Grierson’s motives for his brusque rejection of a documentary film now widely recognized as a masterpiece of world cinema, it is safe to say that this rejection served his interests in his own self-promotion as the founder of the documentary film genre. Indeed, his harsh treatment of Vertov’s work was reminiscent of his equally brutal denunciation of his former hero Robert Flaherty.

In cinematic terms, in eliminating all potential rivals, Grierson effectively had made himself the patriarch of documentary film for years to come. As a result, contemporary film historians such as the American Jack C. Ellis can still write,” It was Grierson who arrived at the concept of the documentary film as we think of it today; not to tell a story with actors but to deal with aspects of the real world that had some drama and perhaps some importance…”[8]




[1] Gaines (bid)p. 86
[2] Jay Leyda( Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film) Third Edition, Princeton University Press, 1983, p.195
[3] Jeremy Hicks (Dziga Vertov – Defining Documentary Film) I.B. Taurus, 2007. pp.123-124
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivor_Montagu
[5] Yuri Tsivian, (Lines of Resistance- Dziga Vertov and the Twenties)2004, Le Giornate del Cinema Muto, pp358-359
[6] John Grierson, The Clarion, Vol. 3, no. 2, February 1931. From Tsivian ( ibid), p. 374
[7] Hicks ( ibid),p.124
[8] Ellis and MacLane ( ibid) p. ix