March 21st, 2010

Russian Film Makers in Paris

  • In paris, during the 1920's there was one or possibly more, film companies, formed by Russian emigres to make films involving the large numbers of emigre actors, dirctors and technicians. One was 'Sequana' films in Billancourt and there was another, I think, called 'Arbetus' (?) films.Can you tell me any more about these companies, who they were, how fudned, what films they made and how they operated (in a studio, on location etc.)Were they innovative in technique, like the Soviet films of the same period? Were they more influenced by German, French or American films? All information gratefuly recived. This is for the final section of a novel and as much detail as possible is essential.


  • Dear Gaucho, Perhaps the first Parisian migr production firm was ?Ermolieff?, which was a Russian production company, ran by Joseph N. Ermolieff (IMDB : http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0259616/) , which moved to France en-masse in 1920. The IMDB mini-biography of director Viktor Tourjansky (IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0869645/bio) describes how Tourjansky ?He left Russia together with his film partners from the Ermolieff film company, actors Ivan Mozzhukhin, Nicolas Koline and Nicolas Rimsky, actress Nathalie Lissenko, his wife Nathalie Kovanko, cinematographer Nikolai Toporkoff and producer Joseph N. Ermolieff.? (ibid). Two films are listed on IMDB under Emolieff?s production company: http://www.imdb.com/company/co0041429/ ? Angoissante aventure, L' (1920) [(The Harrowing Adventure] ? which was a film actually featuring the plight of a group of Russian artists, escaping the Bolsheviks, through the rubbles of the post-WWI Ottoman Empire, to Paris. Ivan Mozzhukhin, a prominent member of the Ermolieff group, played his first role in France on this film. The film ?was actually shot in bits and pieces during the emigration.? (SOURCE: Jay Weissberg, ?Report on the 22nd Pordenone Silent Film Festival?, Senses of Cinema, sensesofcinema.com/contents/festivals/03/29/22nd_pordenone.html>), ? Ordonnance, L' (1921) To these, one should add several films that (strangely) have no production firm credited on IMDB and were produced by Ermolieff: Justice d?abord! (1921) ? ?a remake of Protazanov and Mozhukhin?s 1917 success Prokuror / The Prosecutor.? (SOURCE: http://www.cinetecadelfriuli.org/gcm/previous_editions/edizione2003/Mosjoukine.html) L?Enfant du carnival (1922) Temp tes (1922) There is an academic article written about the group, from which you can learn more about the company and their lifestyle: Thompson, Kristin (1989) "The Ermolieff Group in Paris: Exile, Impressionism, Internationalism." Griffithiana 35-36 (Oct. 1989): 50-57 One can learn a little about their style and influences from this description of Mozzhukhin?s 1921 film L'Enfant du Carnaval (1921): ?Full of visual witticisms that include amusing match cuts and a terrific use of scenography, it can be argued that the choice of subject matter (wealthy bachelor finds a child on his doorstep and hires the child's real mother as nanny) has more than an old-fashioned air about it, but he manages to keep it fresh and sparkling until the tragic conclusion. There are some stylistic similarities between L'Enfant du Carnaval and an Italian film from 1917 which screened at last year's Festival, Luigi Serventi's Le Mogli e le arance (Wives and Oranges), written and supervised by Lucio D'Ambra, although this may be pure coincidence.? (SOURCE: Weissberg, ibid). Wikipedia, too, contributes to our understanding of the influences on his 1923 feature film, ?Le Brasier ardent (The Blazing Inferno)? : ?Brasier, in particular, was highly praised for its innovative and inventive concepts, but ultimately proved too surreal and bizarre to become financially successful. Styled like a semi-comic Kafkaesque nightmare, the film has him playing a detective known only as "Z" hired by an older husband to follow his adventurous young wife. The plot, however, was only the device which Mozzhukhin and his assistant director Aleksandr Volkov (billed in France as Alexandre Volkoff) used to experiment with the audience's perception of reality. Many of the scenes seem to be taking place on sets that are disconcertingly larger than normal and one particularly striking staging has the husband entering the detective agency to find a synchronized line of men, presumably detectives, all wearing tuxedos and gliding about in formation.? (SOURCE: Wikipedia Article, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Mozzhukhin). See more about Mozzhukhin and his films at: Mosjoukine: i sentieri dell'esilio (scroll down to see the English version, Italian is always first, followed by an English passage). Mazzhukhin?s later films were produced not by Ermolieff?s production company (Ermolieff moved to Berlin, and returned to France only with the rise of the Nazis in 1933; to flee again to Hollywood via Mexico in 1937). They were produced by ?Film Albatros? or ?Societe Albatros?. Their list of films on IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/company/co0036242/ ?Soci t Albatros? was founded in 1922 by Russian migr Alexandre Kamenka (1888-1969). Its first film was probably ?Le Brasier Ardent?, already mentioned. Le Brasier Ardent ('Burning Brazier,') 1923 ? dir. Ivan Mosjoukine (also acted) (see : Janet Maslin, ?'BURNING BRAZIER,' 1923 FRENCH SILENT?, New York Times, 25 September 1982, http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9404E2DD1E38F936A1575AC0A964948260) ; IMDB Entry: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0293777/ Kamenka?s Albatros studios were in Montreuil-sous-Bois, and were apparently relatively small (see: John Baxter, Bonuel, Carrol&Graf, 1998, p. 43 - http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/078670506X/ref=sib_aps_pg/104-7364869-0531931?ie=UTF8&keywords=Films%20Albatros&p=S01K&checkSum=gkRc5ozPFZBiJb7bSms%252BB5kWjCzz6PFVTrz40aa1y%252Bo%253D) A theatre/arts/film school complex called Albatros is located today at: 52 rue du Sergent Bobillot in 93100 Montreuil-sous-Bois. http://www.studioalbatros.net/index.htm - it seems like the same place, and you can see pictures (and contact them) on the page, but unfortunately, the history page is under construction. According to Mozzhukhin?s excellent biography on ?Film Reference?, the studio has also served Ermolieff?s people since their arrival to Paris (SOURCE: Liam O?Leary, ?Ivan Mozhukin?, < http://www.filmreference.com/Actors-and-Actresses-Mo-No/Mozhukin-Ivan.html>) One of Albatros? main artistic designers was Lazare Meerson, a Russian Jewish migr who later moved to London (where he died): ?Influenced both by Russian constructivist theory and the Expressionist movement of the Berlin studios, he brought to Paris creative talent, experience, and artistic skills which were to make him the most influential set designer of his generation. [?]Already the group of expatriate Russian filmmakers at Montreuil had encouraged the rejection of conventional theatrical trompe l'oeil painted scenery in favour of more substantial architecturally conceived sets built from natural materials in order to create greater authenticity. Their achievements led to a new perception of the designer's role in the production of mood and meaning in film, and henceforth they were invited to work more closely with the director to express in plastic terms the essential tenor of the film narrative. In this conducive environment, Meerson's talents flourished and his influence grew, but he modestly argued that his sets were there simply to discretely serve a film's action and not to impose upon it: subject matter, the quality of the acting, and mise en sc ne should remain the prime considerations. The value of set design, he maintained, lay in the atmosphere it could generate to inspire actors and director alike as they worked towards their artistic statement.? (SOURCE: R.F. Cousins, ?Lazare Meerson?, Film Reference.com, ) One of Albatros? assets, except for the Russian migr s and some French talents, was the Polish-Jewish migr Jean Epstein. Epstein and other White Russian also formed a mock film school, mostly intended at issuing student visas to migr s (or so claims John Baxter, in his biography of Luis Bunuel, p. 43) A review of one of the company?s films, ?Feu Mathias Pascal? (1925), describes the Albatross group so: ?The highly talented group around Kamenka had considerable influence on the work of French-born filmmakers, and for this film L'Herbier had the advantage of the collaboration of two of the most gifted of the exiles: his star, the great silent actor Ivan Mosjoukine [1889-1939], and his designer, Lazare Meerson, who had arrived in Paris just one year before and was to have a crucial shaping impact on the development of French cinema over the next dozen years through his work with Clair and Feyder. The choice of subject matter points to the literary origins of filmmakers of this generation. Like Gance and Clair, L'Herbier had envisaged a career as a writer before turning to the cinema under the influence of the American films which began to be widely shown in France after World War I. Feu Mathias Pascal was the first work by Luigi Pirandello to be adapted for the screen, and it is clear from later accounts that the author's literary prestige was one of the motivating impulses behind L'Herbier's decision to undertake a production which was never likely to be more than a succ s d'estime.? (SOURCE: FEU MATHIAS Pascal, Film Reference.com, ). More about Albatros, see: Bakker, Gerben "Selling French Films on Foreign Markets: The International Strategy of a Medium-Sized Film Company" Enterprise & Society - Volume 5, Number 1, March 2004, pp. 45-76 (see abstract here http://muse.jhu.edu/cgi-bin/access.cgi?uri=/journals/enterprise_and_society/v005/5.1bakker.html ) Constantin Dorokhine, ?Les migr s russes Paris et les films Albatros? in Le cin ma fran ais muet dans le monde, influences r ciproques, Cin math que de Toulouse and Institut Jean Vigo, Toulouse, 1989 Fran ois Alb ra, Albatros : des russes Paris, 1919-1929, Cin math que fran aise, Montreuil (France) In the summer of 1928 (June 23rd, to be exact), Sequana Film production company joined forces with Albatros. If I understood correctly the comment in Russian on http://www.kinozapiski.ru/article/630/, the company was a transformation of the Association Cinematique European (ACE), meant to work in coproduction with Albatros, the main player of that period and it was not a real independent player. (The original Russian, if you can read: ????????????????? ????????????, ??????????????? ?.???????? ????? 1928 ???? ?? ??? ?? ???????? ???????????? ?????? (???) .? ??????????? , ?????, 1928, 23 ????, ?. 5. ??????? ???????????? Sequana-Film (????????? ? Soci t Albatros ) ???? ?????? ???? ?????? ( Les Deux Timides , ???. ???? ????; ????. ??????? ???????, ???????? ?????? ???????; ????? ???????????? ?????, ?.???????; ???.???????? 1928 ?.); ????? ??????? ( Les Nouveaux messeurs , ???. ??? ??????, ???. ?????? ???????; ???.??????? 1929 ?.); ????????? ???? ( Nuits de princes , ???. ??????? ?`?????, ??????. ???. ?.??????, ???. ???? ??????????, ?????? ???????; ????? ??????????????? ???????, ????????? ????????, ????????, ????????; ???.??????? 1930 ?.).? The head of Sequana was a producer called Simeon Shifrin (or perhaps Simone) ? but I failed to find any significant details about him, aside from a mentioning in passing in : http://www.kinozapiski.ru/article/114/ (again, in Russian: ? ?????? ???? ? ??????????????? ?????????????? ???????????? ???????????????? ?????? ???????? ????? ??????14. ? ???????? ???? 1928 ???? ??? ?-?? ???????????? ?????? (ACE) ???? ????????????? ? Sequana-Film 15?????????? ??????????? ????????, ?? ??????????????? ? ?????????? ? ????????? ????????? ? ?-??? ????? . ??? ?????? ???? ?? ???? ????? ??????????? ?????? ???????????? ??????? ????? ??????? 16, ??????? ???????? ??????, ? ?? ??? ??????????? ??????????? ????? ????? ?????? ???? ?????? 17 (??? ???????????????? ? ?-??? ????????? ). ????? ?????? ????? ??????????? ?????????, ????? 1929 ???? ?????? ?????? ? ????????? ???????? ?????????? ? ??? ?????? ???????? ??????????, ??????????? ? ?????????? ??????, ??? ??????????? ?????????? ????????? ????????? ????????????18. ?? ??????????? ? ????? ?? ????? ????????????? ????? ???????????, ?????? ?????????? ? ??????? ?????????? ????????? ?????? ???????, ?????????? ???????????????? ??? ???????? ?????. ??? ?????? ??????????? ? ????? ?????? 1930 ????, ? ? ??? ??? ???????????? ?????? ?? ????????? ??? ???????????? ? ???? ?? ?? ????? ?????????? ????????? ???????? ??????????? ?????????????????.? ). You can see the relatively short list of films associated with Sequana here: http://www.imdb.com/company/co0055187/ In general, see: Steven P. Hill, ?How to Define "Emigr Film/Theater/Ballet?", http://aatseel.org/program/aatseel/2001/abstracts/Hill.html OKSANA BULGAKOWA1 ?The "Russian Vogue" in Europe and Hollywood: The Transformation of Russian Stereotypes through the 1920s? The Russian Review Volume 64 Page 211 - April 2005 Borger, Lenny. From Moscow to Montreuil. The Russian Emigr s in Paris 1920-1929,?in: Griffithiana 35/36, october 1989, p. 28-39. I hope this answers your question. Please contact me if you need any clarifications on this answer before you rate it. Main search terms: "sequana films" ; albatros Montreuil russian; Montreuil "white russians"; sequana shifrin, cinema 1928 Shifrin paris, cinema 1928 Shifrin, " Simone Shifrin", " Simoen Shifrin", " Simon Shifrin", " Simeon Shifrin", Simeon Shifrin, site:www.imdb.com "sequana film", site:www.kinozapiski.ru "sequana film", ace cinematique european, "sequana film", sequana paris film russian, sequana paris film, sequana Montreuil russian, albatros Montreuil, "The Ermolieff Group in Paris: Exile, Impressionism, Internation ..., Montreuil russian emigre, Montreuil Studios, site:muse.jhu.edu Films Albatros, "Visions d'Art" film, "Visions d'Art", Films Albatros, Alexandre Kamenka, Ermolieff films, "The Ermolieff Group in Paris: Exile, Impressionism, Internation ..., Visions d'Art, Films Albatros, "Ombre de p ch ", Les Films Albatros, Temp tes (1922), Justice d'abord (1921), emolieff films, emolieff film, emolieff, Les contes de mille et une nuits, Viktor Tourjansky, Lazare Meerson, L?ordonnance (1921, Sequana film, Alexandre Volkoff, societe Albatros, Olga Tschechowa, Marise Maia, Nicolai Koline, .Nathalie Lissenko, Ivan Mosjoukine, Alexandre Kamenka, shifrin paris albatross, shifrin paris sequana, Albatros, Sequana


  • thank you very much for oyur excellent answer - I have looked up several of your links and found them helpful - I have not been able to find the Kirsten Thompson article in 'Griffithsiana'how do I go about doing that? I'm having a little trouble with Griffithsiana anyway - perhaps I'm not doing it correctly.


  • The name of the journal (my typo?, sorry) is "Griffithiana". It is apparently archived by Project Muse, so if you (or the library you're working with) has access to Project Muse, you might be able to access it here: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/griffithiana/ The contact details for the editorship is: Livio Jacob Griffithiana La Cineteca del Friuli Via Osoppo 26 33013 Gemona (UD) ITALY You can try to buy this issue (issue 37) from their website, it costs ?8: http://www.cinetecadelfriuli.org/pubblicazioni/griffithiana/griffithiana_31-45.html The whole issue deals with Russian cinema, so you might be interested in other articles as well. Here you can see more information regarding ordering back issues. http://www.cinetecadelfriuli.org/pubblicazioni/griffithiana/griffithiana_order.html Journal's Homepage: http://www.cinetecadelfriuli.org/pubblicazioni/griffithiana/







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