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Dziga Vertov

Dziga Vertov (Russian: Дзига Вертов, born David Abelevich Kaufman, Russian: Дави́д А́белевич Ка́уфман, and also known as Denis Kaufman; 2 January 1896 [O.S. 21 December 1895] – 12 February 1954) was a Soviet pioneer documentary film and newsreel director, as well as a cinema theorist.[1] His filming practices and theories influenced the cinéma vérité style of documentary movie-making and the Dziga Vertov Group, a radical film-making cooperative which was active from 1968 to 1972. He was a member of the Kinoks collective, with Elizaveta Svilova and Mikhail Kaufman.

Dziga Vertov
Vertov (a.k.a. David Kaufman) in 1913
Born
David Abelevich Kaufman

(1896-01-02)2 January 1896
Died12 February 1954(1954-02-12) (aged 58)
NationalitySoviet
Occupation(s)Film director, cinema theorist
Years active1917–1954
Notable workKino-Eye (1924)
A Sixth Part of the World (1926)
Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
Enthusiasm (1931)
SpouseElizaveta Svilova (1923–1954; his death)
FamilyBoris Kaufman (brother)
Mikhail Kaufman (brother)

In the 2012 Sight & Sound poll, critics voted Vertov's Man with a Movie Camera (1929) the eighth-greatest film ever made.[2]

Vertov's younger brothers Boris Kaufman and Mikhail Kaufman were also noted filmmakers, as was his wife, Yelizaveta Svilova.[3]

Biography edit

Early years edit

Vertov was born David Abelevich Kaufman into a Jewish family in Białystok, Poland, then a part of the Russian Empire. He Russified his Jewish name and patronymic, David Abelevich, to Denis Arkadievich at some point after 1918.[4] Vertov studied music at Białystok Conservatory until his family fled from the invading German Army to Moscow in 1915. The Kaufmans soon settled in Petrograd, where Vertov began writing poetry, science fiction, and satire. In 1916–1917 Vertov was studying medicine at the Psychoneurological Institute in Saint Petersburg and experimenting with "sound collages" in his free time. He eventually adopted the name "Dziga Vertov", which translates loosely from Ukrainian as 'spinning top'.[5]

Early writings edit

Vertov is known for many early writings, mainly while still in school, that focus on the individual versus the perceptive nature of the camera lens, which he was known to call his "second eye".

Most of Vertov's early work was unpublished, and few manuscripts survived after the Second World War, though some material surfaced in later films and documentaries created by Vertov and his brothers, Boris Kaufman and Mikhail Kaufman.

Vertov is known for quotes on perception, and its ineffability, in relation to the nature of qualia (sensory experiences).[6]

After the October Revolution edit

After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, at the age of 22, Vertov began editing for Kino-Nedelya (Кино-Неделя, the Moscow Cinema Committee's weekly film series, and the first newsreel series in Russia), which first came out in June 1918. While working for Kino-Nedelya he met his future wife, the film director and editor, Elizaveta Svilova, who at the time was working as an editor at Goskino. She began collaborating with Vertov, beginning as his editor but becoming assistant and co-director in subsequent films, such as Man with a Movie Camera (1929), and Three Songs About Lenin (1934).

Vertov worked on the Kino-Nedelya series for three years, helping establish and run a film-car on Mikhail Kalinin's agit-train during the ongoing Russian Civil War between Communists and counterrevolutionaries. Some of the cars on the agit-trains were equipped with actors for live performances or printing presses; Vertov's had equipment to shoot, develop, edit, and project film. The trains went to battlefronts on agitation-propaganda missions intended primarily to bolster the morale of the troops; they were also intended to stir up revolutionary fervor of the masses.

In 1919, Vertov compiled newsreel footage for his documentary Anniversary of the Revolution; he also supervised the filming of his project The Battle for Tsaritsyn (1919).[7] in 1921 he compiled History of the Civil War. The so-called "Council of Three," a group issuing manifestoes in LEF, a radical Russian newsmagazine, was established in 1922; the group's "three" were Vertov, his (future) wife and editor Elizaveta Svilova, and his brother and cinematographer Mikhail Kaufman.[8] Vertov's interest in machinery led to a curiosity about the mechanical basis of cinema.

His statement "We: Variant of a Manifesto" was published in the first issue of Kino-Fot, published by Aleksei Gan in 1922. It commenced with a distinction between "kinoks" and other approaches to the emergent cinematic industry:

"We call ourselves kinoks – as opposed to "cinematographers", a herd of junkmen doing rather well peddling their rags.
We see no connection between true kinochestvo and the cunning and calculation of the profiteers.
We consider the psychological Russo-German film-drama – weighed down with apparitions and childhood memories – an absurdity."[9]

Kino-Pravda edit

In 1922, the year that Nanook of the North was released, Vertov started the Kino-Pravda series.[10] The series took its title from the official government newspaper Pravda. "Kino-Pravda" (literally translated, "film truth") continued Vertov's agit-prop bent. "The Kino-Pravda group began its work in a basement in the centre of Moscow", Vertov explained. He called it damp and dark. There was an earthen floor and holes one stumbled into at every turn. Vertov said, "This dampness prevented our reels of lovingly edited film from sticking together properly, rusted our scissors and our splicers.[11]

Vertov's driving vision, expounded in his frequent essays, was to capture "film truth"—that is, fragments of actuality which, when organized together, have a deeper truth that cannot be seen with the naked eye. In the Kino-Pravda series, Vertov focused on everyday experiences, eschewing bourgeois concerns and filming marketplaces, bars, and schools instead, sometimes with a hidden camera, without asking permission first. Usually, the episodes of Kino-Pravda did not include reenactments or stagings. (One exception is the segment about the trial of the Social Revolutionaries: the scenes of the selling of the newspapers on the streets and the people reading the papers in the trolley were both staged for the camera.) The cinematography is simple, functional, unelaborate—perhaps a result of Vertov's disinterest in both "beauty" and the "grandeur of fiction". Twenty-three issues of the series were produced over a period of three years; each issue lasted about twenty minutes and usually covered three topics. The stories were typically descriptive, not narrative, and included vignettes and exposés, showing for instance the renovation of a trolley system, the organization of farmers into communes, and the trial of Social Revolutionaries; one story shows starvation in the nascent Communist state. Propagandistic tendencies are also present, but with more subtlety, in the episode featuring the construction of an airport: one shot shows the Tsar's tanks helping prepare a foundation, with an intertitle reading "Tanks on the labor front".

Vertov clearly intended an active relationship with his audience in the series—in the final segment he includes contact information—but by the 14th episode the series had become so experimental that some critics dismissed Vertov's efforts as "insane".[citation needed] Vertov responded to their criticisms with the assertion that the critics were hacks nipping "revolutionary effort" in the bud, and concluded an essay with a promise to "explode art's tower of Babel".[12] In Vertov's view, "art's tower of Babel" was the subservience of cinematic technique to narrative—what film theorist Noël Burch terms the institutional mode of representation—which would come to dominate the classical Hollywood cinema.

By this point in his career, Vertov was clearly and emphatically dissatisfied with narrative tradition, and expresses his hostility towards dramatic fiction of any kind both openly and repeatedly; he regarded drama as another "opiate of the masses". Vertov freely admitted one criticism leveled at his efforts on the Kino-Pravda series—that the series, while influential, had a limited release.

By the end of the Kino-Pravda series, Vertov made liberal use of stop motion, freeze frames, and other cinematic "artificialities", giving rise to criticisms not just of his trenchant dogmatism, but also of his cinematic technique. Vertov explains himself in "On 'Kinopravda' ": in editing "chance film clippings" together for the Kino-Nedelia series, he "began to doubt the necessity of a literary connection between individual visual elements spliced together.... This work served as the point of departure for 'Kinopravda' ".[13] Towards the end of the same essay, Vertov mentions an upcoming project which seems likely to be Man with a Movie Camera (1929), calling it an "experimental film" made without a scenario; just three paragraphs above, Vertov mentions a scene from Kino Pravda which should be quite familiar to viewers of Man with the Movie Camera: the peasant works, and so does the urban woman, and so too, the woman film editor selecting the negative... "[14]

Man with a Movie Camera edit

With Lenin's admission of limited private enterprise through the New Economic Policy (NEP) of 1921, Russia began receiving fiction films from afar, an occurrence that Vertov regarded with undeniable suspicion, calling drama a "corrupting influence" on the proletarian sensibility ("On 'Kinopravda' ", 1924). By this time Vertov had been using his newsreel series as a pedestal to vilify dramatic fiction for several years; he continued his criticisms even after the warm reception of Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin (1925). Potemkin was a heavily fictionalized film telling the story of a mutiny on a battleship which came about as a result of the sailors' mistreatment; the film was an obvious but skillful propaganda piece glorifying the proletariat. Vertov lost his job at Sovkino in January 1927, possibly as a result of criticizing a film which effectively preaches the line of the Communist Party. He was fired for making A Sixth Part of the World: Advertising and the Soviet Universe for the State Trade Organization into a propaganda film, selling the Soviet as an advanced society under the NEP, instead of showing how they fit into the world economy.

The Ukraine State Studio hired Vertov to create Man with a Movie Camera. Vertov says in his essay "The Man with a Movie Camera" that he was fighting "for a decisive cleaning up of film-language, for its complete separation from the language of theater and literature".[15] By the later segments of Kino-Pravda, Vertov was experimenting heavily, looking to abandon what he considered film clichés (and receiving criticism for it); his experimentation was even more pronounced and dramatic by the time of Man with a Movie Camera, which was filmed in Ukraine. Some have criticized the obvious stagings in this film as being at odds with Vertov's credos of "life as it is" and "life caught unawares": the scene of the woman getting out of bed and getting dressed is obviously staged, as is the reversed shot of the chess pieces being pushed off a chess board and the tracking shot that films Mikhail Kaufman riding in a car filming a third car.

However, Vertov's two credos, often used interchangeably, are in fact distinct, as Yuri Tsivian comments in the commentary track on the DVD for Man with the Movie Camera: for Vertov, "life as it is" means to record life as it would be without the camera present. "Life caught unawares" means to record life when surprised, and perhaps provoked, by the presence of a camera.[16] This explanation contradicts the common assumption that for Vertov "life caught unawares" meant "life caught unaware of the camera". All of these shots might conform to Vertov's credo "caught unawares". His slow motion, fast motion, and other camera techniques were a way to dissect the image, Mikhail Kaufman stated in an interview. It was to be the honest truth of perception. For example, in Man with a Movie Camera, two trains are shown almost melting into each other. Although we are taught to see trains as not riding that close, Vertov tried to portray the actual sight of two passing trains. Mikhail spoke about Eisenstein's films as being different from his and his brother's in that Eisenstein "came from the theatre, in the theatre one directs dramas, one strings beads". "We all felt...that through documentary film we could develop a new kind of art. Not only documentary art, or the art of chronicle, but rather an art based on images, the creation of an image-oriented journalism", Mikhail explained. More than even film truth, Man with a Movie Camera was supposed to be a way to make those in the Soviet Union more efficient in their actions. He slowed down his movements, such as the decision whether to jump or not. You can see the decision in his face, a psychological dissection for the audience. He wanted a peace between the actions of man and the actions of a machine, for them to be, in a sense, one.

Cine-Eye edit

"Cine-Eye" is a montage method developed by Dziga Vertov and first formulated in his work "WE: Variant of a Manifesto" in 1919.

Dziga Vertov believed his concept of Kino-Glaz, or "Cine Eye" in English, would help contemporary "man" evolve from a flawed creature into a higher, more precise form. He compared man unfavorably to machines: "In the face of the machine we are ashamed of man’s inability to control himself, but what are we to do if we find the unerring ways of electricity more exciting than the disorderly haste of active people [...]"[17] As he put it in a 1923 credo, "I am the Cine-Eye. I am the mechanical eye. I the machine show you the world as only I can see it. I emancipate myself henceforth and forever from human immobility. I am in constant motion... My path leads towards the creation of a fresh perception of the world. I can thus decipher a world that you do not know."[18]

Like other Russian filmmakers, he attempted to connect his ideas and techniques to the advancement of the aims of the Soviet Union. Whereas Sergei Eisenstein viewed his montage of attractions as a creative tool through which the film-viewing masses could be subjected to "emotional and psychological influence" and therefore able to perceive "the ideological aspect" of the films they were watching, Vertov believed the Cine-Eye would influence the actual evolution of man, "from a bumbling citizen through the poetry of the machine to the perfect electric man".[19]

Vertov surrounded himself with others who were also firm believers in his ideas. These were the Kinoks, other Russian filmmakers who would assist him in his hopes of making "cine-eye" a success.

Vertov believed film was too "romantic" and "theatricalised" due to the influence of literature, theater, and music, and that these psychological film-dramas "prevent man from being as precise as a stopwatch and hamper his desire for kinship with the machine". He desired to move away from "the pre-Revolutionary 'fictional' models" of filmmaking to one based on the rhythm of machines, seeking to "bring creative joy to all mechanical labour"[20] and to "bring men closer to machines".[20]

In May 1927 Vertov moved to Ukraine, and the Cine-Eye movement broke up.[7]

Late career edit

Vertov's successful career continued into the 1930s. Enthusiasm: Symphony of the Donbass (1931), an examination into Soviet miners, has been called a 'sound film', with sound recorded on location, and these mechanical sounds woven together, producing a symphony-like effect.

Three years later, Three Songs About Lenin (1934) looked at the revolution through the eyes of the Russian peasantry. For his film, Vertov had been hired by Mezhrabpomfilm. The film, finished in January 1934 for Lenin's obit, was only publicly released in the Soviet Union in November of that year. From July 1934 it was shown at private screenings to various high-ranking Soviet officials and also to prominent foreigners including H. G. Wells, William Bullitt, and others, and it was screened at the Venice Film Festival in August 1934.[21] A new version of the film was released in 1938, including a longer sequence to reflect Stalin's achievements at the end of the film and leaving out footage of "enemies" of that time. Today there exists a 1970 reconstruction by Yelizaveta Svilova. With the rise and official sanction of socialist realism in 1934, Vertov was forced to cut his personal artistic output significantly, eventually becoming little more than an editor for Soviet newsreels.[citation needed] Lullaby, perhaps the last film in which Vertov was able to maintain his artistic vision, was released in 1937.

Dziga Vertov died of cancer in Moscow in 1954.

Family edit

Vertov's brother Boris Kaufman was a cinematographer who worked with Jean Vigo on L'Atalante (1934) and much later for directors such as Elia Kazan in the United States who won an Oscar for his work on On the Waterfront. His other brother, Mikhail Kaufman, worked with Vertov on his films until he became a documentarian in his own right. Mikhail Kaufman's directorial debut was the film In Spring (1929).

In 1923, Vertov married his long-time collaborator Elizaveta Svilova.[22]

Influence and legacy edit

Vertov's legacy still lives on today. His ideas are echoed in cinéma vérité, the movement of the 1960s named after Vertov's Kino-Pravda. The 1960s and 1970s saw an international revival of interest in Vertov.[23]

The independent, exploratory style of Vertov influenced and inspired many filmmakers and directors like the Situationist Guy Debord and independent companies such as Vertov Industries in Hawaii. The Dziga Vertov Group borrowed his name. In 1960, Jean Rouch used Vertov's filming theory when making Chronicle of a Summer. His partner Edgar Morin coined the term cinéma vérité when describing the style, using direct translation of Vertov's KinoPravda.

The Free Cinema movement in the United Kingdom during the 1950s, the Direct Cinema in North America in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and the Candid Eye series in Canada in the 1950s all essentially owed a debt to Vertov.[24]

This revival of Vertov's legacy included rehabilitation of his reputation in the Soviet Union, with retrospectives of his films, biographical works, and writings. In 1962, the first Soviet monograph on Vertov was published, followed by another collection, "Dziga Vertov: Articles, Diaries, Projects". In 1984, to recall the 30th anniversary of Vertov's death, three New York cultural organizations put on the first American retrospective of Vertov's work.[25]

New Media theorist Lev Manovich suggested Vertov as one of the early pioneers of database cinema genre in his essay Database as a symbolic form.

Filmography edit

 
Poster for Kino-Eye, designed by Alexander Rodchenko (1924)
Soviet Toys
  • 1918 Кинонеделя (Kino Nedelya/Cinema Week)
  • 1918 Годовщина революции (Anniversary of the Revolution)
  • 1921 История гражданской войны (History of the Civil War)
  • 1922 Киноправда (Kino-Pravda)
  • 1924 Советские игрушки (Soviet Toys)
  • 1924 Кино-глаз (Kino-Eye), cameraman Ilya Kopalin
  • 1926 Шестая часть мира (A Sixth Part of the World)
  • 1928 Одиннадцатый (The Eleventh Year)
  • 1929 Человек с киноаппаратом (Man with a Movie Camera)
  • 1931 Энтузиазм (Симфония Донбаса) (Enthusiasm)
  • 1934 Три песни о Ленине (Three Songs About Lenin)
  • 1937 Памяти Серго Орджоникидзе (In Memory of Sergo Ordzhonikidze)
  • 1937 Колыбельная (Lullaby)
  • 1938 Три героини (Three Heroines)
  • 1942 Казахстан – фронту! (Kazakhstan for the Front!)
  • 1944 В горах Ала-Тау (In the Mountains of Ala-Tau)
  • 1954 Новости дня (News of the Day)

Lost films edit

Some early Vertov's films were lost for many years. Only 12 minutes of his 1918 Anniversary of the Revolution were known; in 2018 Russian film historian Nikolai Izvolov found lost film in the Russian State Documentary Film & Photo Archive and restored it.[26] In 2022 he reconstructed another lost film, 1921 The History of the Civil War using archive materials.[27]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Peter Rollberg (2009). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 731–735. ISBN 978-0-8108-6072-8.
  2. ^ "Sight & Sound Revises Best-Films-Ever Lists". studiodaily. 1 August 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  3. ^ McClane, Betsy A. (2013). A New History of Documentary Film (2nd ed.). New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 42, 47.
  4. ^ Early Soviet Cinema; Innovation, Ideology and Propaganda by David Gillespie Wallflower Press London 2005, page 57
  5. ^ Documentary Film: A Very Short Introduction: A Very Short Introduction by Patricia Aufderheide; Oxford University Press, 28 November 2007, page 37
  6. ^ "Dziga Vertov". Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  7. ^ a b Hicks, Jeremy. (2007). Dziga Vertov : defining documentary film. London: I.B. Tauris. p. 55. ISBN 9781435603523. OCLC 178389068.
  8. ^ Paul Rotha (1930). The film till now, a survey of the cinema. Jonathan Cape. pp. 167–170.
  9. ^ "We: Variant of a manifesto" (PDF). monoskop.org. (PDF) from the original on 23 April 2014. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  10. ^ McLane, Betsy A. (5 April 2012). A New History of Documentary Film: Second Edition. A&C Black. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4411-2457-9.
  11. ^ Leyda, Jay (21 August 1983). Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film, With a New Postscript and a Filmography Brought Up to the Present. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00346-7.
  12. ^ Vertov 1924, p. 47
  13. ^ Vertov 1924, p. 42
  14. ^ Vertov 1924, p. 46
  15. ^ Vertov 1928, p. 83
  16. ^ At 16:04 on the commentary track.
  17. ^ Vertov 1922, p. 69
  18. ^ The film factory : Russian and Soviet cinema in documents. Taylor, Richard, 1946–, Christie, Ian, 1945–. London: Routledge. 1994. p. 93. ISBN 041505298X. OCLC 32274035.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  19. ^ Vertov 1922, pp. 69–71
  20. ^ a b Vertov 1922, p. 71
  21. ^ MacKay, John (2012). "Allegory and Accommodation: Vertov's Three Songs of Lenin (1934) as a Stalinist Film". In Ioffe, Dennis; White, Frederick (eds.). Russian Avant-Garde and Radical Modernism: An Introductory Reader. Academic Studies Press. p. 420. ISBN 9781618111425.
  22. ^ Penfold, Christopher. "Elizaveta Svilova and Soviet Documentary Film" (PDF). eprints.soton.ac.uk. University of Southampton Institutional Research Repository. (PDF) from the original on 28 August 2019.
  23. ^ Barnouw, Erik. "Dziga Vertov – Director – Films as Director:, Publications". www.filmreference.com.
  24. ^ Dancyger, Ken (2002). The technique of film and video editing: history, theory, and practice, by Ken Dancyger. ISBN 9780240804200.
  25. ^ Monaco, James (1991). The Encyclopedia of Film. Perigee Books. p. 552. ISBN 9780399516047. American retrospective of Vertov'.
  26. ^ www.oberon.nl, Oberon Amsterdam. "Anniversary of the Revolution (1918) - Dziga Vertov | IDFA" – via www.idfa.nl.
  27. ^ www.oberon.nl, Oberon Amsterdam. "The History of the Civil War (1921) - Dziga Vertov | IDFA" – via www.idfa.nl.

References edit

Books and articles
  • Barnouw, Erik. Documentary: a History of the Non-fiction Film. Oxford University Press. Original copyright 1974.
  • Bohlman, Philip Vilas. Music, Modernity, and the Foreign in the New Germany. 1994, pp. 121–152
  • Christie, Ian. "Rushes: Pordenone Retrospective: Gazing into the Future.", in: Sight and Sound. 2005, 15, 1, 4–5, British Film Institute
  • Cook, Simon. "Our Eyes, Spinning Like Propellers: Wheel of Life, Curve of Velocities, and Dziga Vertov's Theory of the Interva l." October, 2007: 79–91.
  • Ellis, Jack C. The Documentary Idea: a Critical History of English-Language Documentary Film and Video. Prentice Hall, 1989.
  • Feldman, Seth. "'Peace between Man and Machine': Dziga Vertov's The Man with a Movie Camera." in: Barry Keith Grant, and Jeannette Sloniowski, eds. Documenting the Documentary: Close Readings of Documentary Film and Video. Wayne State University Press, 1998. pp. 40–53.
  • Feldman, Seth. Evolution of style in the early work of Dziga Vertov. 1977, Arno Press, New York.
  • Graffy, Julian; Deriabin, Aleksandr; Sarkisova, Oksana; Keller, Sarah; Scandiffio, Theresa . Lines of Resistance: Dziga Vertov and the Twenties; edited and with an introduction by Yuri Tsivian. Le Giornate del cinema muto, Gemona, Udine
  • Heftberger, Adelheid. Kollision der Kader. Dziga Vertovs Filme, die Visualisierung ihrer Strukturen und die Digital Humanities. Munich: edition text + kritik, 2016.
  • Hicks, Jeremy. Dziga Vertov: Defining Documentary Film. London & New York: I. B. Tauris, 2007.
  • Le Grice, Malcolm. Abstract Film and Beyond. Studio Vista, 1977.
  • MacKay, John. "Allegory and Accommodation: Vertov's «Three Songs of Lenin» (1934) as a Stalinist Film." In Film History: An International Journal; 18.4 (2006) 376–391.
  • MacKay, John. "Disorganized Noise: Enthusiasm and the Ear of the Collective."
  • MacKay, John. "Film Energy: Process and Metanarrative in Dziga Vertov's «The Eleventh Year» (1928)." October; 121 (Summer 2007): 41–78.
  • MacKay, John. "The 'Spinning Top' Takes Another Turn: Vertov Today."
  • MacKay, John. John MacKay | Yale University – Academia.edu Drafts of Dziga Vertov: Life and Work]
  • Michelson, Annette & Turvey, Malcolm, eds. "New Vertov Studies." Special Issue of October, (October 121 (Summer 2007)).
  • Roberts, Graham. The Man with the Movie Camera. I. B. Tauris, 2001. ISBN 1-86064-394-9
  • Singer, Ben. "Connoisseurs of Chaos: Whitman, Vertov and the 'Poetic Survey,'" Literature/Film Quarterly; 15:4 (Fall 1987): 247–258.
  • Tode, Thomas & Wurm, Barbara, Austrian Film Museum, eds. Dziga Vertov. The Vertov Collection at the Austrian Film Museum, Bilingual (German-English). (Paperback – May 2006), FilmmuseumSynemaPublikationen.-- online version available here.
  • Tsivian, Yuri, ed. Lines of Resistance: Dziga Vertov and the Twenties. Le Giornate del Cinema Muto, 2004. ISBN 88-86155-15-8
  • Vertov, Dziga. On Kinopravda. 1924, and The Man with the Movie Camera. 1928, in: Annette Michelson ed. Kevin O'Brien tr. Kino-Eye : The Writings of Dziga Vertov, University of California Press, 1995.
  • Dziga Vertov. We. A Version of a Manifesto. 1922, in Ian Christie, Richard Taylor eds. The Film Factory: Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents, 1896–1939 Routledge, 1994. ISBN 0-415-05298-X
  • Warren, Charles, ed. Beyond Document: Essays on Nonfiction Film. Wesleyan University Press, 1996.
DVDs
  • Dziga Vertov's Man with the Movie Camera DVD, audio commentary track by Yuri Tsivian.
  • Entuziazm (Simfonija Donbassa) DVD, restored version and unrestored version plus documentary on Peter Kubelka's restoration.

External links edit

  • Dziga Vertov at IMDb
  • Dziga Vertov's Kino-Eye and Three Songs About Lenin at UBUWEB
  • Newsreels by Vertov on europeanfilmgateway.eu
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 18 June 2010), by John MacKay, Yale University
  • Kino Eye (1924), scored by Robert Israel in 1999 on YouTube
  • Central Studio for Documentary Film (ЦСДФ) museum biography page (in Russian)

dziga, vertov, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, abelevich, family, name, kaufman, russian, Дзига, Вертов, born, david, abelevich, kaufman, russian, Дави, белевич, Ка, уфман, also, known, denis, kaufman, january, 1896. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Abelevich and the family name is Kaufman Dziga Vertov Russian Dziga Vertov born David Abelevich Kaufman Russian Davi d A belevich Ka ufman and also known as Denis Kaufman 2 January 1896 O S 21 December 1895 12 February 1954 was a Soviet pioneer documentary film and newsreel director as well as a cinema theorist 1 His filming practices and theories influenced the cinema verite style of documentary movie making and the Dziga Vertov Group a radical film making cooperative which was active from 1968 to 1972 He was a member of the Kinoks collective with Elizaveta Svilova and Mikhail Kaufman Dziga VertovVertov a k a David Kaufman in 1913BornDavid Abelevich Kaufman 1896 01 02 2 January 1896Bialystok Grodno Governorate Russian Empire now Poland Died12 February 1954 1954 02 12 aged 58 Moscow RSFSR Soviet Union now Russia NationalitySovietOccupation s Film director cinema theoristYears active1917 1954Notable workKino Eye 1924 A Sixth Part of the World 1926 Man with a Movie Camera 1929 Enthusiasm 1931 SpouseElizaveta Svilova 1923 1954 his death FamilyBoris Kaufman brother Mikhail Kaufman brother In the 2012 Sight amp Sound poll critics voted Vertov s Man with a Movie Camera 1929 the eighth greatest film ever made 2 Vertov s younger brothers Boris Kaufman and Mikhail Kaufman were also noted filmmakers as was his wife Yelizaveta Svilova 3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early writings 1 3 After the October Revolution 1 3 1 Kino Pravda 1 3 2 Man with a Movie Camera 1 3 3 Cine Eye 1 4 Late career 2 Family 3 Influence and legacy 4 Filmography 4 1 Lost films 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Vertov was born David Abelevich Kaufman into a Jewish family in Bialystok Poland then a part of the Russian Empire He Russified his Jewish name and patronymic David Abelevich to Denis Arkadievich at some point after 1918 4 Vertov studied music at Bialystok Conservatory until his family fled from the invading German Army to Moscow in 1915 The Kaufmans soon settled in Petrograd where Vertov began writing poetry science fiction and satire In 1916 1917 Vertov was studying medicine at the Psychoneurological Institute in Saint Petersburg and experimenting with sound collages in his free time He eventually adopted the name Dziga Vertov which translates loosely from Ukrainian as spinning top 5 Early writings edit Vertov is known for many early writings mainly while still in school that focus on the individual versus the perceptive nature of the camera lens which he was known to call his second eye Most of Vertov s early work was unpublished and few manuscripts survived after the Second World War though some material surfaced in later films and documentaries created by Vertov and his brothers Boris Kaufman and Mikhail Kaufman Vertov is known for quotes on perception and its ineffability in relation to the nature of qualia sensory experiences 6 After the October Revolution edit After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 at the age of 22 Vertov began editing for Kino Nedelya Kino Nedelya the Moscow Cinema Committee s weekly film series and the first newsreel series in Russia which first came out in June 1918 While working for Kino Nedelya he met his future wife the film director and editor Elizaveta Svilova who at the time was working as an editor at Goskino She began collaborating with Vertov beginning as his editor but becoming assistant and co director in subsequent films such as Man with a Movie Camera 1929 and Three Songs About Lenin 1934 Vertov worked on the Kino Nedelya series for three years helping establish and run a film car on Mikhail Kalinin s agit train during the ongoing Russian Civil War between Communists and counterrevolutionaries Some of the cars on the agit trains were equipped with actors for live performances or printing presses Vertov s had equipment to shoot develop edit and project film The trains went to battlefronts on agitation propaganda missions intended primarily to bolster the morale of the troops they were also intended to stir up revolutionary fervor of the masses In 1919 Vertov compiled newsreel footage for his documentary Anniversary of the Revolution he also supervised the filming of his project The Battle for Tsaritsyn 1919 7 in 1921 he compiled History of the Civil War The so called Council of Three a group issuing manifestoes in LEF a radical Russian newsmagazine was established in 1922 the group s three were Vertov his future wife and editor Elizaveta Svilova and his brother and cinematographer Mikhail Kaufman 8 Vertov s interest in machinery led to a curiosity about the mechanical basis of cinema His statement We Variant of a Manifesto was published in the first issue of Kino Fot published by Aleksei Gan in 1922 It commenced with a distinction between kinoks and other approaches to the emergent cinematic industry We call ourselves kinoks as opposed to cinematographers a herd of junkmen doing rather well peddling their rags We see no connection between true kinochestvo and the cunning and calculation of the profiteers We consider the psychological Russo German film drama weighed down with apparitions and childhood memories an absurdity 9 Kino Pravda edit In 1922 the year that Nanook of the North was released Vertov started the Kino Pravda series 10 The series took its title from the official government newspaper Pravda Kino Pravda literally translated film truth continued Vertov s agit prop bent The Kino Pravda group began its work in a basement in the centre of Moscow Vertov explained He called it damp and dark There was an earthen floor and holes one stumbled into at every turn Vertov said This dampness prevented our reels of lovingly edited film from sticking together properly rusted our scissors and our splicers 11 Vertov s driving vision expounded in his frequent essays was to capture film truth that is fragments of actuality which when organized together have a deeper truth that cannot be seen with the naked eye In the Kino Pravda series Vertov focused on everyday experiences eschewing bourgeois concerns and filming marketplaces bars and schools instead sometimes with a hidden camera without asking permission first Usually the episodes of Kino Pravda did not include reenactments or stagings One exception is the segment about the trial of the Social Revolutionaries the scenes of the selling of the newspapers on the streets and the people reading the papers in the trolley were both staged for the camera The cinematography is simple functional unelaborate perhaps a result of Vertov s disinterest in both beauty and the grandeur of fiction Twenty three issues of the series were produced over a period of three years each issue lasted about twenty minutes and usually covered three topics The stories were typically descriptive not narrative and included vignettes and exposes showing for instance the renovation of a trolley system the organization of farmers into communes and the trial of Social Revolutionaries one story shows starvation in the nascent Communist state Propagandistic tendencies are also present but with more subtlety in the episode featuring the construction of an airport one shot shows the Tsar s tanks helping prepare a foundation with an intertitle reading Tanks on the labor front Vertov clearly intended an active relationship with his audience in the series in the final segment he includes contact information but by the 14th episode the series had become so experimental that some critics dismissed Vertov s efforts as insane citation needed Vertov responded to their criticisms with the assertion that the critics were hacks nipping revolutionary effort in the bud and concluded an essay with a promise to explode art s tower of Babel 12 In Vertov s view art s tower of Babel was the subservience of cinematic technique to narrative what film theorist Noel Burch terms the institutional mode of representation which would come to dominate the classical Hollywood cinema By this point in his career Vertov was clearly and emphatically dissatisfied with narrative tradition and expresses his hostility towards dramatic fiction of any kind both openly and repeatedly he regarded drama as another opiate of the masses Vertov freely admitted one criticism leveled at his efforts on the Kino Pravda series that the series while influential had a limited release By the end of the Kino Pravda series Vertov made liberal use of stop motion freeze frames and other cinematic artificialities giving rise to criticisms not just of his trenchant dogmatism but also of his cinematic technique Vertov explains himself in On Kinopravda in editing chance film clippings together for the Kino Nedelia series he began to doubt the necessity of a literary connection between individual visual elements spliced together This work served as the point of departure for Kinopravda 13 Towards the end of the same essay Vertov mentions an upcoming project which seems likely to be Man with a Movie Camera 1929 calling it an experimental film made without a scenario just three paragraphs above Vertov mentions a scene from Kino Pravda which should be quite familiar to viewers of Man with the Movie Camera the peasant works and so does the urban woman and so too the woman film editor selecting the negative 14 Man with a Movie Camera edit Main article Man with a Movie Camera With Lenin s admission of limited private enterprise through the New Economic Policy NEP of 1921 Russia began receiving fiction films from afar an occurrence that Vertov regarded with undeniable suspicion calling drama a corrupting influence on the proletarian sensibility On Kinopravda 1924 By this time Vertov had been using his newsreel series as a pedestal to vilify dramatic fiction for several years he continued his criticisms even after the warm reception of Sergei Eisenstein s Battleship Potemkin 1925 Potemkin was a heavily fictionalized film telling the story of a mutiny on a battleship which came about as a result of the sailors mistreatment the film was an obvious but skillful propaganda piece glorifying the proletariat Vertov lost his job at Sovkino in January 1927 possibly as a result of criticizing a film which effectively preaches the line of the Communist Party He was fired for making A Sixth Part of the World Advertising and the Soviet Universe for the State Trade Organization into a propaganda film selling the Soviet as an advanced society under the NEP instead of showing how they fit into the world economy The Ukraine State Studio hired Vertov to create Man with a Movie Camera Vertov says in his essay The Man with a Movie Camera that he was fighting for a decisive cleaning up of film language for its complete separation from the language of theater and literature 15 By the later segments of Kino Pravda Vertov was experimenting heavily looking to abandon what he considered film cliches and receiving criticism for it his experimentation was even more pronounced and dramatic by the time of Man with a Movie Camera which was filmed in Ukraine Some have criticized the obvious stagings in this film as being at odds with Vertov s credos of life as it is and life caught unawares the scene of the woman getting out of bed and getting dressed is obviously staged as is the reversed shot of the chess pieces being pushed off a chess board and the tracking shot that films Mikhail Kaufman riding in a car filming a third car However Vertov s two credos often used interchangeably are in fact distinct as Yuri Tsivian comments in the commentary track on the DVD for Man with the Movie Camera for Vertov life as it is means to record life as it would be without the camera present Life caught unawares means to record life when surprised and perhaps provoked by the presence of a camera 16 This explanation contradicts the common assumption that for Vertov life caught unawares meant life caught unaware of the camera All of these shots might conform to Vertov s credo caught unawares His slow motion fast motion and other camera techniques were a way to dissect the image Mikhail Kaufman stated in an interview It was to be the honest truth of perception For example in Man with a Movie Camera two trains are shown almost melting into each other Although we are taught to see trains as not riding that close Vertov tried to portray the actual sight of two passing trains Mikhail spoke about Eisenstein s films as being different from his and his brother s in that Eisenstein came from the theatre in the theatre one directs dramas one strings beads We all felt that through documentary film we could develop a new kind of art Not only documentary art or the art of chronicle but rather an art based on images the creation of an image oriented journalism Mikhail explained More than even film truth Man with a Movie Camera was supposed to be a way to make those in the Soviet Union more efficient in their actions He slowed down his movements such as the decision whether to jump or not You can see the decision in his face a psychological dissection for the audience He wanted a peace between the actions of man and the actions of a machine for them to be in a sense one Cine Eye edit Cine Eye is a montage method developed by Dziga Vertov and first formulated in his work WE Variant of a Manifesto in 1919 Dziga Vertov believed his concept of Kino Glaz or Cine Eye in English would help contemporary man evolve from a flawed creature into a higher more precise form He compared man unfavorably to machines In the face of the machine we are ashamed of man s inability to control himself but what are we to do if we find the unerring ways of electricity more exciting than the disorderly haste of active people 17 As he put it in a 1923 credo I am the Cine Eye I am the mechanical eye I the machine show you the world as only I can see it I emancipate myself henceforth and forever from human immobility I am in constant motion My path leads towards the creation of a fresh perception of the world I can thus decipher a world that you do not know 18 Like other Russian filmmakers he attempted to connect his ideas and techniques to the advancement of the aims of the Soviet Union Whereas Sergei Eisenstein viewed his montage of attractions as a creative tool through which the film viewing masses could be subjected to emotional and psychological influence and therefore able to perceive the ideological aspect of the films they were watching Vertov believed the Cine Eye would influence the actual evolution of man from a bumbling citizen through the poetry of the machine to the perfect electric man 19 Vertov surrounded himself with others who were also firm believers in his ideas These were the Kinoks other Russian filmmakers who would assist him in his hopes of making cine eye a success Vertov believed film was too romantic and theatricalised due to the influence of literature theater and music and that these psychological film dramas prevent man from being as precise as a stopwatch and hamper his desire for kinship with the machine He desired to move away from the pre Revolutionary fictional models of filmmaking to one based on the rhythm of machines seeking to bring creative joy to all mechanical labour 20 and to bring men closer to machines 20 In May 1927 Vertov moved to Ukraine and the Cine Eye movement broke up 7 Late career edit Vertov s successful career continued into the 1930s Enthusiasm Symphony of the Donbass 1931 an examination into Soviet miners has been called a sound film with sound recorded on location and these mechanical sounds woven together producing a symphony like effect Three years later Three Songs About Lenin 1934 looked at the revolution through the eyes of the Russian peasantry For his film Vertov had been hired by Mezhrabpomfilm The film finished in January 1934 for Lenin s obit was only publicly released in the Soviet Union in November of that year From July 1934 it was shown at private screenings to various high ranking Soviet officials and also to prominent foreigners including H G Wells William Bullitt and others and it was screened at the Venice Film Festival in August 1934 21 A new version of the film was released in 1938 including a longer sequence to reflect Stalin s achievements at the end of the film and leaving out footage of enemies of that time Today there exists a 1970 reconstruction by Yelizaveta Svilova With the rise and official sanction of socialist realism in 1934 Vertov was forced to cut his personal artistic output significantly eventually becoming little more than an editor for Soviet newsreels citation needed Lullaby perhaps the last film in which Vertov was able to maintain his artistic vision was released in 1937 Dziga Vertov died of cancer in Moscow in 1954 Family editVertov s brother Boris Kaufman was a cinematographer who worked with Jean Vigo on L Atalante 1934 and much later for directors such as Elia Kazan in the United States who won an Oscar for his work on On the Waterfront His other brother Mikhail Kaufman worked with Vertov on his films until he became a documentarian in his own right Mikhail Kaufman s directorial debut was the film In Spring 1929 In 1923 Vertov married his long time collaborator Elizaveta Svilova 22 Influence and legacy editVertov s legacy still lives on today His ideas are echoed in cinema verite the movement of the 1960s named after Vertov s Kino Pravda The 1960s and 1970s saw an international revival of interest in Vertov 23 The independent exploratory style of Vertov influenced and inspired many filmmakers and directors like the Situationist Guy Debord and independent companies such as Vertov Industries in Hawaii The Dziga Vertov Group borrowed his name In 1960 Jean Rouch used Vertov s filming theory when making Chronicle of a Summer His partner Edgar Morin coined the term cinema verite when describing the style using direct translation of Vertov s KinoPravda The Free Cinema movement in the United Kingdom during the 1950s the Direct Cinema in North America in the late 1950s and early 1960s and the Candid Eye series in Canada in the 1950s all essentially owed a debt to Vertov 24 This revival of Vertov s legacy included rehabilitation of his reputation in the Soviet Union with retrospectives of his films biographical works and writings In 1962 the first Soviet monograph on Vertov was published followed by another collection Dziga Vertov Articles Diaries Projects In 1984 to recall the 30th anniversary of Vertov s death three New York cultural organizations put on the first American retrospective of Vertov s work 25 New Media theorist Lev Manovich suggested Vertov as one of the early pioneers of database cinema genre in his essay Database as a symbolic form Filmography edit nbsp Poster for Kino Eye designed by Alexander Rodchenko 1924 source source source source Soviet Toys1918 Kinonedelya Kino Nedelya Cinema Week 1918 Godovshina revolyucii Anniversary of the Revolution 1921 Istoriya grazhdanskoj vojny History of the Civil War 1922 Kinopravda Kino Pravda 1924 Sovetskie igrushki Soviet Toys 1924 Kino glaz Kino Eye cameraman Ilya Kopalin 1926 Shestaya chast mira A Sixth Part of the World 1928 Odinnadcatyj The Eleventh Year 1929 Chelovek s kinoapparatom Man with a Movie Camera 1931 Entuziazm Simfoniya Donbasa Enthusiasm 1934 Tri pesni o Lenine Three Songs About Lenin 1937 Pamyati Sergo Ordzhonikidze In Memory of Sergo Ordzhonikidze 1937 Kolybelnaya Lullaby 1938 Tri geroini Three Heroines 1942 Kazahstan frontu Kazakhstan for the Front 1944 V gorah Ala Tau In the Mountains of Ala Tau 1954 Novosti dnya News of the Day Lost films edit Some early Vertov s films were lost for many years Only 12 minutes of his 1918 Anniversary of the Revolution were known in 2018 Russian film historian Nikolai Izvolov found lost film in the Russian State Documentary Film amp Photo Archive and restored it 26 In 2022 he reconstructed another lost film 1921 The History of the Civil War using archive materials 27 See also editSoviet montage theory Formalist film theory Cinema Verite Pure Cinema Abstract FilmFootnotes edit Peter Rollberg 2009 Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema US Rowman amp Littlefield pp 731 735 ISBN 978 0 8108 6072 8 Sight amp Sound Revises Best Films Ever Lists studiodaily 1 August 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2012 McClane Betsy A 2013 A New History of Documentary Film 2nd ed New York Bloomsbury pp 42 47 Early Soviet Cinema Innovation Ideology and Propaganda by David Gillespie Wallflower Press London 2005 page 57 Documentary Film A Very Short Introduction A Very Short Introduction by Patricia Aufderheide Oxford University Press 28 November 2007 page 37 Dziga Vertov Retrieved 2 January 2018 a b Hicks Jeremy 2007 Dziga Vertov defining documentary film London I B Tauris p 55 ISBN 9781435603523 OCLC 178389068 Paul Rotha 1930 The film till now a survey of the cinema Jonathan Cape pp 167 170 We Variant of a manifesto PDF monoskop org Archived PDF from the original on 23 April 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2018 McLane Betsy A 5 April 2012 A New History of Documentary Film Second Edition A amp C Black p 44 ISBN 978 1 4411 2457 9 Leyda Jay 21 August 1983 Kino A History of the Russian and Soviet Film With a New Postscript and a Filmography Brought Up to the Present Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00346 7 Vertov 1924 p 47 Vertov 1924 p 42 Vertov 1924 p 46 Vertov 1928 p 83 At 16 04 on the commentary track Vertov 1922 p 69 The film factory Russian and Soviet cinema in documents Taylor Richard 1946 Christie Ian 1945 London Routledge 1994 p 93 ISBN 041505298X OCLC 32274035 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Vertov 1922 pp 69 71 a b Vertov 1922 p 71 MacKay John 2012 Allegory and Accommodation Vertov s Three Songs of Lenin 1934 as a Stalinist Film In Ioffe Dennis White Frederick eds Russian Avant Garde and Radical Modernism An Introductory Reader Academic Studies Press p 420 ISBN 9781618111425 Penfold Christopher Elizaveta Svilova and Soviet Documentary Film PDF eprints soton ac uk University of Southampton Institutional Research Repository Archived PDF from the original on 28 August 2019 Barnouw Erik Dziga Vertov Director Films as Director Publications www filmreference com Dancyger Ken 2002 The technique of film and video editing history theory and practice by Ken Dancyger ISBN 9780240804200 Monaco James 1991 The Encyclopedia of Film Perigee Books p 552 ISBN 9780399516047 American retrospective of Vertov www oberon nl Oberon Amsterdam Anniversary of the Revolution 1918 Dziga Vertov IDFA via www idfa nl www oberon nl Oberon Amsterdam The History of the Civil War 1921 Dziga Vertov IDFA via www idfa nl References editBooks and articlesBarnouw Erik Documentary a History of the Non fiction Film Oxford University Press Original copyright 1974 Bohlman Philip Vilas Music Modernity and the Foreign in the New Germany 1994 pp 121 152 Christie Ian Rushes Pordenone Retrospective Gazing into the Future in Sight and Sound 2005 15 1 4 5 British Film Institute Cook Simon Our Eyes Spinning Like Propellers Wheel of Life Curve of Velocities and Dziga Vertov s Theory of the Interva l October 2007 79 91 Ellis Jack C The Documentary Idea a Critical History of English Language Documentary Film and Video Prentice Hall 1989 Feldman Seth Peace between Man and Machine Dziga Vertov s The Man with a Movie Camera in Barry Keith Grant and Jeannette Sloniowski eds Documenting the Documentary Close Readings of Documentary Film and Video Wayne State University Press 1998 pp 40 53 Feldman Seth Evolution of style in the early work of Dziga Vertov 1977 Arno Press New York Graffy Julian Deriabin Aleksandr Sarkisova Oksana Keller Sarah Scandiffio Theresa Lines of Resistance Dziga Vertov and the Twenties edited and with an introduction by Yuri Tsivian Le Giornate del cinema muto Gemona Udine Heftberger Adelheid Kollision der Kader Dziga Vertovs Filme die Visualisierung ihrer Strukturen und die Digital Humanities Munich edition text kritik 2016 Hicks Jeremy Dziga Vertov Defining Documentary Film London amp New York I B Tauris 2007 Le Grice Malcolm Abstract Film and Beyond Studio Vista 1977 MacKay John Allegory and Accommodation Vertov s Three Songs of Lenin 1934 as a Stalinist Film In Film History An International Journal 18 4 2006 376 391 MacKay John Disorganized Noise Enthusiasm and the Ear of the Collective MacKay John Film Energy Process and Metanarrative in Dziga Vertov s The Eleventh Year 1928 October 121 Summer 2007 41 78 MacKay John The Spinning Top Takes Another Turn Vertov Today MacKay John John MacKay Yale University Academia edu Drafts of Dziga Vertov Life and Work Michelson Annette amp Turvey Malcolm eds New Vertov Studies Special Issue of October October 121 Summer 2007 Roberts Graham The Man with the Movie Camera I B Tauris 2001 ISBN 1 86064 394 9 Singer Ben Connoisseurs of Chaos Whitman Vertov and the Poetic Survey Literature Film Quarterly 15 4 Fall 1987 247 258 Tode Thomas amp Wurm Barbara Austrian Film Museum eds Dziga Vertov The Vertov Collection at the Austrian Film Museum Bilingual German English Paperback May 2006 FilmmuseumSynemaPublikationen online version available here Tsivian Yuri ed Lines of Resistance Dziga Vertov and the Twenties Le Giornate del Cinema Muto 2004 ISBN 88 86155 15 8 Vertov Dziga On Kinopravda 1924 and The Man with the Movie Camera 1928 in Annette Michelson ed Kevin O Brien tr Kino Eye The Writings of Dziga Vertov University of California Press 1995 Dziga Vertov We A Version of a Manifesto 1922 in Ian Christie Richard Taylor eds The Film Factory Russian and Soviet Cinema in Documents 1896 1939 Routledge 1994 ISBN 0 415 05298 X Warren Charles ed Beyond Document Essays on Nonfiction Film Wesleyan University Press 1996 DVDsDziga Vertov s Man with the Movie Camera DVD audio commentary track by Yuri Tsivian Entuziazm Simfonija Donbassa DVD restored version and unrestored version plus documentary on Peter Kubelka s restoration External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dziga Vertov Dziga Vertov at IMDb Senses Of Cinema Dziga Vertov Dziga Vertov s Kino Eye and Three Songs About Lenin at UBUWEB Newsreels by Vertov on europeanfilmgateway eu A biography of Vertov at the Wayback Machine archived 18 June 2010 by John MacKay Yale University Kino Eye 1924 scored by Robert Israel in 1999 on YouTube Central Studio for Documentary Film CSDF museum biography page in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dziga Vertov amp oldid 1162334347, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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