Product Information
A silent film showing the people of Moscow at work and at play, and the machines that keep the city moving. Film pioneer Dziga Vertov uses all the cinematic techniques available at the time - dissolves, split screen, slow motion and freeze frames.Product Identifiers
EAN5035673007730
eBay Product ID (ePID)66030157
Product Key Features
Aspect Ratio1.33 Full Screen
Film/TV TitleThe Man with a Movie Camera
DirectorDziga Vertov
Release Year2008
FeaturesBlack & White, Remastered and Restored
GenreDocumentaries, General, Documentaries & Biographies
Additional Product Features
CertificateU
Country/Region of ManufactureSoviet Union
Number of Discs1
Additional InformationNot merely a cinematic portrait of a day in the life of a city, cinema pioneer Dziga Vertov's MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA is an experimental manifesto of vision. Controversial when it was created in 1929, the film still pulses with the unruly energy and innovation of Vertov's genius. Subverting and criticizing the conventions of capitalist fiction filmmaking that he so despised, Vertov and his revolutionary Kino-Eye crew (including his wife as editor and his brother as cameraman--both of whom appear in the film) created a plethora of filmic devises in order to comment on vision, life, Marxism, and modernity. Differing film speeds, superimposition, evocative and manipulative editing, and rhythmic graphic composition all blend seamlessly in a magic show of life above and below the city. Shooting shops, traffic, children, coal miners, workers, human bodies, and nature, Vertov creates visual rhymes and graphic portraits of the structure of life and the explosion of perception. MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA took part in the city symphony genre that was popular at the time (BERLIN: SYMPHONIE OF A GREAT CITY is another example) but transcended it in its critical distance, sheer innovation, and sublimely fluid vision of man, machine, and society.
ScreenwriterDziga Vertov
Sound sourcePCM Stereo
EditorElisaveta Svilova, Dziga Vertov
Movie/TV TitleThe Man With A Movie Camera
Director of PhotographyMikhail Kaufman