Movies for the Masses: Popular Cinema and Soviet Society in the 1920s

Movies for the Masses: Popular Cinema and Soviet Society in the 1920s

by Denise J . Youngblood (Author)

Synopsis

This book is a pathbreaking study of the 'unknown' Soviet cinema: the popular movies which were central to Soviet film production in the 1920s. Professor Youngblood discusses acting genres, the cinema stars, audiences, and the influences of foreign films and examines three leading filmmakers - Iakov Protazanov, Boris Barnet, and Fridikh Ermler. She also looks at the governmental and industrial circumstances underlying filmmaking practices of the era, and provides an invaluable survey of the contemporary debates concerning official policy on entertainment cinema. Professor Youngblood demonstrates that the film culture of the 1920s was predominantly and aggressively 'bourgeois' and enjoyed patronage that cut across class lines and political allegiance. Thus, she argues, the extent to which Western and pre-revolutionary influences, boureois directors and middle-class tastes dominated the film world is as important as the tradition of revolutionary utopianism in understanding the transformation of Soviet culture in the Stalin revolution.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 296
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 26 Nov 1993

ISBN 10: 0521466326
ISBN 13: 9780521466325
Book Overview: A pathbreaking study of Soviet cinema in the 1920s.

Media Reviews
'Youngblood is an extremely knowledgeable guide. It seems that she has perused all contemporary film journals and read almost every film review. She wastes no time on over-clever analysis of individual frames; there is no semiotics, deconstruction or any other modern over-valued analytical tool here. Instead we hear the knowledgeable, intelligent and confident voice of an expert. It is a wonderful book.' Peter Kenez, Europe-Asia Studies
'[Movies for the masses] is often provocative and stimulating. It is also well written, very readable and has a style that engages both the reader's attention and the intellect ... It provides a wealth of statistical information ... and will appeal to a broad spectrum of readers from politics, film and cultural studies ... [It] is a 'good read' and you leave it knowing more about the period, as well as having your own arguments 'honed' by the new evidence and opinions provided.' Roger Powell, Drama
Movies for the Masses is an excellent survey of the popular cinema of the 1920's and the debates surrounding it. Slavic and East European Journal
[A] sprightly study of the cinema industry at the dawning f the world's first proletarian state.... Charles A. Ruud, Journal of Modern History