The Battleship Potemkin: Difference between revisions

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'''Artist:''' [[Sergeii Eisenstein]]
'''Artist:''' [[Sergeii Eisenstein]]


'''Confronting Bodies:''' French, British, American and Russian governments
'''Confronting Bodies:''' French, British, American governments


'''Dates of Action:''' 1926, 1930s
'''Dates of Action:''' 1926, 1930s
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[[Category:1930s]]
[[Category:1930s]]
[[Category:20th century]]
[[Category:20th century]]
[[Category:North America]]
[[Category:United States]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:Europe]]
[[Category:Europe]]
[[Category:England]]
[[Category:England]]

Latest revision as of 16:12, 5 August 2011

Date: 1926

Region: Europe, North America

Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion

Medium: Film Video


Potemkin.jpg

Artist: Sergeii Eisenstein

Confronting Bodies: French, British, American governments

Dates of Action: 1926, 1930s

Location: Eisenstein's films were censored worldwide, however the Soviet government frequently interfered with the production of his films

Description of Artwork: Most of Eisenstein's film were historically rooted and patronized by Soviet leadership. The films that launched Eisenstein into prominence were two historical films Strike (1924)and The Battleship Potemkin (1925) that dealt with worker's rights. Both received critical praise in the Soviet Union, but faced censorship abroad. The Battleship Potemkin was considered "powerfully seditious" by critics.

The Incident: The arrival of The Battleship Potemkin in Britain coincided with the General Strike of 1926 and was widely seen as being seditious. It was banned from public viewing by the home secretary. The Battleship Potemkin was banned in Britain until 1954.

Eisenstein's film The Battleship Potemkin (1926) was burned by French customs upon arrival, and banned by movie theaters in Pennsylvania because it "gives American sailors a blueprint as to how to conduct a mutiny."

In the 1930s after growing frustrated with these problems Eisenstein went to Europe and the United States to study the use of sound in the film industry there. While in Britain he tried to get the ban on The Battleship Potemkin lifted but could not. In the United States the director got a contract with Paramount Pictures. His decision to use Theodore Dreiser's book An American Tragedy as source material for his film raised objections with the studio and he left the United States without completing a film.

In 1937 at the Cinema Workers' Conference Eisenstein was forced to make a public apology for his "political and artistic errors".

Results of Incident: Eisenstein continued to make films, however, they were subject to the scrutiny of the Communist party. In 1948 Eisenstein died from a heart attack after the creative frustration and personal attacks became too much for him to bear.

Source: Censorship, A World Encyclopedia, ed. D. Jones