Yelizaveta Svilova: Difference between revisions
m Expanded the filmography Tags: Visual edit Possible vandalism |
|||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
She covered the opening of [[Auschwitz]] [[death camp]] in [[Poland]] by the [[Red Army]] in January 1945. She filmed a documentary, notably with reenactments, titled ''Auschwitz'', part of an exhibition titled "Filming the War; the Soviets and the Holocaust (1941-1946)" (9 January 2015 – 27 September 2015) in [[Paris]], [[France]], at the [[Memorial de la Shoah]]. |
She covered the opening of [[Auschwitz]] [[death camp]] in [[Poland]] by the [[Red Army]] in January 1945. She filmed a documentary, notably with reenactments, titled ''Auschwitz'', part of an exhibition titled "Filming the War; the Soviets and the Holocaust (1941-1946)" (9 January 2015 – 27 September 2015) in [[Paris]], [[France]], at the [[Memorial de la Shoah]]. |
||
==Filmography<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0841294/|title=Elizaveta Svilova|website=IMDb|access-date=2017-12-22}}</ref>== |
|||
==Filmography== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|+ |
|+ |
Revision as of 05:19, 22 December 2017
Yelizaveta Ignatevna Svilova (Russian: Елизаве́та Игна́тьевна Сви́лова, rendered in Latin as Elizaveta Svilova) (5 September 1900, Moscow – 11 November 1975, Moscow) was a Russian filmmaker and film editor.
She was a lifelong collaborator with her husband, Dziga Vertov. She is best known as the supervising editor on Man with a Movie Camera and for appearing in the film.[1]
Council of Three
She was part of the "Council of Three," with her husband and brother-in-law, cinematographer Mikhail Kaufman. Together, they "proclaimed a 'death sentence' on the cinema that came before, faulting it for mixing in 'foreign matter' from theater and literature."[2]
Auschwitz
She covered the opening of Auschwitz death camp in Poland by the Red Army in January 1945. She filmed a documentary, notably with reenactments, titled Auschwitz, part of an exhibition titled "Filming the War; the Soviets and the Holocaust (1941-1946)" (9 January 2015 – 27 September 2015) in Paris, France, at the Memorial de la Shoah.
Filmography[3]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1920's | Kino-Pravda | 23 issue newsreel series |
1924 | Cinema Eye | Editor |
1925 | The First October Without Ilich | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
1926 | A Sixth Part of the World | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
1926 | Shagay, Sovet! | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
1927 | Bukhara | Director |
1928 | The Oath of Youth | Director |
1928 | The Eleventh Year | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
1929 | Man with a Movie Camera | Editor |
1929 | Enthusiasm | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
1934 | Three Songs of Lenin | 2nd Unit/Assistant Director |
198 | In Memory of Sergo Ordzhonikidze | Assistant Director |
1942 | For You at the Front | Director |
1944 | Klyatva Molodykh | Director |
1945 | The Fall of Berlin | Director |
1945 | Auschwitz | Director/Writer |
1946 | Parade of Youth | Director |
1947 | Nuremberg Trials | Director |
References
- ^ Ebert, Roger (December 4, 2009). Man with camera invents new style. Chicago Sun-Times
- ^ Lim, Dennis (April 8, 2011). Machine Age Poet, Born in Revolution, Stifled Under Stalin. New York Times
- ^ "Elizaveta Svilova". IMDb. Retrieved 2017-12-22.