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  1. Alexander Dovzhenko. (Sosniza, 1894 - Moscú, 1956) Director de cine soviético que consiguió que la industria cinematográfica de su país obtuviera en los años treinta el reconocimiento internacional. Equiparado con figuras de la talla de Sergei Eisenstein y Vsevolod Pudovkin, hizo, al igual que éstos, películas cuyos argumentos giraban ...

  2. 23 de may. de 2018 · Soviet filmmaker Alexander Dovzhenko (1894–1956) made several Russian–cinema classics of the 1920s and 1930s, but his heroic epics of peasants triumphing over a harsh, forbidding landscape never quite fully fit the political ideologies of the Stalinist era. Cultural historians rank Dovzhenko with the likes of Sergei Eisenstein and Vsevolod ...

  3. Dovzhenko, his wife and co-director, Julia Solntseva & Futurist Poet Alexander Kruchenykh (1930), Photograph Alexander Rodchenko In its original North American release, Zemlia would be translated into English as Soil , the North American reviewers early on realizing the inadequacy of the provided translated title [233] .

  4. 20 de dic. de 2018 · Dovzhenko, Alexander. Jeremy Carr. December 2018. Great Directors. Issue 89. b. 10 September, 1894, Sosnitsa, Ukraine. d. 25 November, 1956, Moscow, Russia. “I sit down beside Pudovkin,” writes Sergei Eisenstein in 1928, after he and his filmmaking compatriot Vsevolod Pudovkin attend the premiere of Alexander Dovzhenko’s Zvenigora.

  5. Earth ( Russian: Земля, lit. ' Earth ', Ukrainian: Земля, translit. Zemlya) is a 1930 Soviet silent film by Ukrainian director Oleksandr Dovzhenko. The film concerns the process of collectivization and the hostility of kulak landowners under the First Five-Year Plan. It is the third film, with Zvenigora and Arsenal, of Dovzhenko's ...

  6. 28 de jun. de 2011 · Dovzhenko: Folk Tale and Revolution. by Gilberto Perez. from Film Quarterly Summer 2011, Vol. 64, No. 4. Like Sergei Eisenstein’s Strike (1925), Alexander Dovzhenko’s Zvenigora (1928) is an amazing early work that dropped out of sight for many years. It was Potemkin (1925) and October (1928), Arsenal (1929) and Earth (1930), that won ...

  7. 16 de nov. de 2017 · Ukrainian writer-director Alexander Dovzhenko may be the most neglected major filmmaker of the 20th century. He’s never come close to receiving his due… in large part because his fervent, pantheistic, folkloric films develop more like lyric poems, moving from one stanza to the next, than like narratives, proceeding by way of paragraphs or chapters.

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