Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 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 is perhaps best known for making films with her husband Dziga Vertov and her brother-in-law ...

  2. A film editor, director, writer, and archivist, Elizaveta Svilova was an intellectual and creative force in early Soviet montage. She is best known for her extensive collaborations with her husband, Dziga Vertov, on seminal early documentary films, and especially for instances when she appeared on camera demonstrating the act of editing itself.

  3. Yelizaveta Svilova, a la sombra de Dziga Vértov. La obra más conocida del cine vanguardista ruso es El hombre de la cámara (1929), documental sobre un día cualquiera de una ciudad...

  4. Elizaveta Ignatevna Svilova (Елизавета Игнатьевна Свилова, 1900–1975) was a Russian filmmaker and film editor. She was a lifelong collaborator with her husband, Dziga Vertov, and a key member of his Kino-Eye group. Born Elizaveta Schnitt, she entered films at age 14 as an editing assistant for Pathe in Moscow, and in ...

  5. 2 de dic. de 2023 · Elizaveta Svilova is perhaps most recognized as the wife of Dziga Vertov, a pioneer of Soviet documentary cinema during the 1920s best known for his film Man with a Movie Camera (1929), but she also stands as a core voice of Soviet cinema and early female pioneers of world cinema.

  6. As part of the “Council of Three” (with Dziga Vertov and Michael Kaufman) and as the editor of Man with a Movie Camera, she pioneered montage editing, which had a staggering influence on the evolution of film.

  7. 5 de sept. de 2021 · Editor Elizaveta Svilova is best known for her partnership with her husband Dziga Vertov, playing a crucial role in the making of his seminal documentary Man with a Movie Camera. However, Svilova also made more than a hundred films away from Vertov, including several important works documenting the fallout of the Second World War.