 No film student worth their salt could  deny Russia’s epic influence upon cinema history.  It was here  that montage techniques were first pioneered and refined, and it was  here that some of film history’s greatest masterpieces were born.   So many years and one iron curtain later, and Russia is again eager  to reassert its position on the international cinema landscape. The  2007 Russian Film Festival Russian Revolution is a tribute to  Russia’s fast growing cinema industry, and, this week, it makes its  way into our part of the globe.
No film student worth their salt could  deny Russia’s epic influence upon cinema history.  It was here  that montage techniques were first pioneered and refined, and it was  here that some of film history’s greatest masterpieces were born.   So many years and one iron curtain later, and Russia is again eager  to reassert its position on the international cinema landscape. The  2007 Russian Film Festival Russian Revolution is a tribute to  Russia’s fast growing cinema industry, and, this week, it makes its  way into our part of the globe. “Russia’s film production is increasing  at an incredible rate!” exclaims the festival director, Nicholas Maksymow,  “Firstly, there are lots of private bodies who provide funding for  budding filmmakers, and if that does not work there is always the state  funding board.  What’s happening there now is similar to what  the AFI did in the late seventies to revive the Australian film industry.  There’s this strong, creative reenergising.”
Luckily, Russian filmmakers are also  enjoying a lucrative success at the Russian box office.  This year  they are expected to retain over one quarter of the total national box  office takings.  “Unlike Australians, Russians don’t really  experience that kind of ‘cultural cringe’,” explains Maksymow.  “There really isn’t a pressure to be Western, because Russians are  so proud of all their art and above all their cinema… Films like  Daywatch and Nighwatch and Wolfhound are obviously  Russian films trying to copy Hollywood, but there is still this unique  ‘Russianness’ about them, and there’s no pressure to get rid of  that.  In fact, that’s why people seem to enjoy them so much.”
Maksymow connects this sense of “Russianness”  with the Russian artistic drive to paint realistically complex pictures  of daily life, that accurately scan the whole range of the emotional  spectrum.  “For instance, in one movie you might cry, you might  laugh and you might feel scared,” he emphasises, “There is so much  emotion going through one film and that’s what life is like in Russia  at the moment, because it’s so unpredictable.  In everyday life  people go through both laughter and hardship, and Russian film is all  about capturing that realistically.” At this point, he laughs about  how the highest rating Australian film to have ever been screened in  Russia was Lantana – a fact that he attributes to Lantana’s  complex, realistic, and unquestionably dark, treatment of human emotions. 
If there is one section of human life,  though, from which Russian cinema steers clear, it is contemporary Russian  politics.  While the world reels in response to news about Russia’s  (often brutal) censorship of political journalism, the film industry  is safe in its detachment.  Maksymow explains, “The journalists  get into trouble because they’re overtly political, and trying to  push a certain view, while cinema is still seen as a democratic form  of the arts, in the sense that it’s not really political at all.   Filmmaking doesn’t really touch sensitive political issues in Russia;  it’s more about making fun of the old politicians and examining our  past than looking at the contemporary situation.”
 

 
 
 
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