Strike


1h 32m 1925
Strike

Brief Synopsis

Russia's Czarist rulers go all out to thwart a factory workers' strike.

Film Details

Also Known As
Stachka
Genre
Silent
Drama
Foreign
Political
Release Date
1925
Location
Leningrad, Soviet Union; Odessa, Soviet Union

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 32m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1

Synopsis

The suicide of a fired factory worker sets off an initially peaceful strike, until the Russian Cossacks decide to slaughter the workers as means to silence their protest.

Film Details

Also Known As
Stachka
Genre
Silent
Drama
Foreign
Political
Release Date
1925
Location
Leningrad, Soviet Union; Odessa, Soviet Union

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 32m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1

Articles

Strike (1925)


Today, Sergei Eisenstein is known primarily by film scholars and students, and perhaps only vaguely by general audiences who may have a glancing familiarity with his most globally celebrated work, Battleship Potemkin (1925), thanks to its famous Odessa Steps sequence and its numerous imitations and homages in such films as The Untouchables (1987), Woody Allen's Bananas (1971) and Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent (1940). At one time, however, he was one of the most influential filmmakers in the world, due to his theories on editing and composition and the ideological and emotional uses of shot juxtaposition. That statement, of course, is a simplification of Eisenstein's contributions to cinema history, and readers are advised to study further to learn about the director in depth. A good place to start a study of his technical and theoretical innovations would be his first feature film, Strike (1925).

Many critics and film analysts rank this as one of the greatest debuts by a director, right up there with Orson Welles's Citizen Kane (1941). Eisenstein spent months researching the project and laying out his shots in minute detail. Much of what he brought to the screen came from his early work as head of Proletcult Theatre, the stage branch of a Soviet cultural movement dedicated to producing ideological works of art in the years after the 1917 revolution. The aim of these theatrical works was to produce a psychological and emotional effect in audiences through "shocks" that would awaken them to conditions in their lives. This "theatre of attractions," as it became known, attempted to raise ideological awareness, what some referred to as "defamiliarizing the familiar." Transitioning these ideas to film, Eisenstein conceived of Strike as a series of such shocks in order to make people aware of the exploitation of the working class by the capitalist system.

In a nutshell, the plot concerns a strike for better working conditions undertaken by workers at a locomotive factory, spurred by the suicide of one worker who had been falsely accused of theft. The factory owners resort to any means necessary to break the workers' resolve, including bringing in spies, provocateurs, and finally the police and military to use deadly force against the strikers and their families, whose initial enthusiasm is worn away by hunger and domestic strife.

Rejecting any pretext of objectivity, Eisenstein makes his case against the factory owners and their lackeys with a remarkable range of techniques, including double exposures, reflections, distortions, extreme angles, shots through windows and other frames within the film frame, and side-by-side shots that merge into one another, to name just a few. He also makes extensive use of animal imagery, such as the cross-cutting between the slaughter of a cow and the attack by Cossacks against the strikers.

Strike featured actors from the Proletcult Theatre in a deliberate "antinaturalistic" style of acting using heightened gesture and movement. Emphasizing the collective over the individual, Eisenstein favors intricately choreographed crowd shots and uses relatively few close-ups of faces. The part of the factory foreman was played by Grigori Aleksandrov, a colleague of Eisenstein's since their days together in Proletcult Theater. He is also listed as a co-writer and assistant director on Strike and assistant director on Eisenstein's October (1928). In the 1930s, Aleksandrov began his own directing career and was the creator of the earliest musical-comedies made in the Soviet Union (under orders from Stalin).

Because he was a novice filmmaker, Eisenstein would likely not have realized all of his bold ideas without the assistance of cinematographer Eduard Tisse, who collaborated with the director for much of his career. Tisse was the director of cinematography on many of Eisenstein's greatest films, including October and Alexander Nevsky (1938).

Strike got a tepid reception from audiences and critics, but Eisenstein expanded his techniques and quickly followed up with Battleship Potemkin, which earned him much praise and fame at home and abroad. He would only complete five more feature-length films and a handful of shorts over the course of his career. Like Welles, cinema's other great "debut," he suffered numerous financial, political, and health setbacks over the years. He died in 1948 at the age of 50.

Director: Sergei M. Eisenstein
Producer: Boris Mikhin
Screenplay: Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein, Ilya Kravchunovsky, Valeryan Pletnyov
Cinematography: Eduard Tisse, Vasili Khvatov, Vladimir Popov
Art Direction: Vasili Rakhals Cast: Maksim Shtraukh (Police Spy), Grigori Aleksandrov (Factory Foreman), Mikhail Gomorov (Worker), I. Ivanov (Chief of Police), Ivan Klyukvin (Revolutionary), Aleksandr Antonov (Member of Strike Committee).
BW-82m.

by Rob Nixon
Strike (1925)

Strike (1925)

Today, Sergei Eisenstein is known primarily by film scholars and students, and perhaps only vaguely by general audiences who may have a glancing familiarity with his most globally celebrated work, Battleship Potemkin (1925), thanks to its famous Odessa Steps sequence and its numerous imitations and homages in such films as The Untouchables (1987), Woody Allen's Bananas (1971) and Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent (1940). At one time, however, he was one of the most influential filmmakers in the world, due to his theories on editing and composition and the ideological and emotional uses of shot juxtaposition. That statement, of course, is a simplification of Eisenstein's contributions to cinema history, and readers are advised to study further to learn about the director in depth. A good place to start a study of his technical and theoretical innovations would be his first feature film, Strike (1925). Many critics and film analysts rank this as one of the greatest debuts by a director, right up there with Orson Welles's Citizen Kane (1941). Eisenstein spent months researching the project and laying out his shots in minute detail. Much of what he brought to the screen came from his early work as head of Proletcult Theatre, the stage branch of a Soviet cultural movement dedicated to producing ideological works of art in the years after the 1917 revolution. The aim of these theatrical works was to produce a psychological and emotional effect in audiences through "shocks" that would awaken them to conditions in their lives. This "theatre of attractions," as it became known, attempted to raise ideological awareness, what some referred to as "defamiliarizing the familiar." Transitioning these ideas to film, Eisenstein conceived of Strike as a series of such shocks in order to make people aware of the exploitation of the working class by the capitalist system. In a nutshell, the plot concerns a strike for better working conditions undertaken by workers at a locomotive factory, spurred by the suicide of one worker who had been falsely accused of theft. The factory owners resort to any means necessary to break the workers' resolve, including bringing in spies, provocateurs, and finally the police and military to use deadly force against the strikers and their families, whose initial enthusiasm is worn away by hunger and domestic strife. Rejecting any pretext of objectivity, Eisenstein makes his case against the factory owners and their lackeys with a remarkable range of techniques, including double exposures, reflections, distortions, extreme angles, shots through windows and other frames within the film frame, and side-by-side shots that merge into one another, to name just a few. He also makes extensive use of animal imagery, such as the cross-cutting between the slaughter of a cow and the attack by Cossacks against the strikers. Strike featured actors from the Proletcult Theatre in a deliberate "antinaturalistic" style of acting using heightened gesture and movement. Emphasizing the collective over the individual, Eisenstein favors intricately choreographed crowd shots and uses relatively few close-ups of faces. The part of the factory foreman was played by Grigori Aleksandrov, a colleague of Eisenstein's since their days together in Proletcult Theater. He is also listed as a co-writer and assistant director on Strike and assistant director on Eisenstein's October (1928). In the 1930s, Aleksandrov began his own directing career and was the creator of the earliest musical-comedies made in the Soviet Union (under orders from Stalin). Because he was a novice filmmaker, Eisenstein would likely not have realized all of his bold ideas without the assistance of cinematographer Eduard Tisse, who collaborated with the director for much of his career. Tisse was the director of cinematography on many of Eisenstein's greatest films, including October and Alexander Nevsky (1938). Strike got a tepid reception from audiences and critics, but Eisenstein expanded his techniques and quickly followed up with Battleship Potemkin, which earned him much praise and fame at home and abroad. He would only complete five more feature-length films and a handful of shorts over the course of his career. Like Welles, cinema's other great "debut," he suffered numerous financial, political, and health setbacks over the years. He died in 1948 at the age of 50. Director: Sergei M. Eisenstein Producer: Boris Mikhin Screenplay: Grigori Aleksandrov, Sergei M. Eisenstein, Ilya Kravchunovsky, Valeryan Pletnyov Cinematography: Eduard Tisse, Vasili Khvatov, Vladimir Popov Art Direction: Vasili Rakhals Cast: Maksim Shtraukh (Police Spy), Grigori Aleksandrov (Factory Foreman), Mikhail Gomorov (Worker), I. Ivanov (Chief of Police), Ivan Klyukvin (Revolutionary), Aleksandr Antonov (Member of Strike Committee). BW-82m. by Rob Nixon

Strike - Sergei Eisenstein's STRIKE - The Remastered DVD Edition from Kino International


Once considered one of the great filmmakers who ever lived, and whose Battleship Potemkin (1925) was once judged by critics and directors to be the greatest film ever made, Sergei Eisenstein has seen his canonization come and go. Now merely a film school requirement, the name never attains front rank anymore - due to either the general collapse of Soviet Communism and therefore any need to take its culture seriously, or an evolution in taste away from montage pyrotechnics in silent film and toward the camera-movement poetics of the Murnau school, or the last half-century of silent-era discovery and reevaluation that has perhaps stolen the spotlight from Eisenstein's hectically edited, fiercely Bolshevik smart bombs.

Like advertising, propaganda is made both useless and quaint by its inherent ephemerality; considering it as art years hence means tumbling into the rabbit-hole of kitsch. (Which we do; note the modern popularity of futurist design and the poster art of Alexander Rodochenko, who, if he were alive, could design my phone bill and I'd pay it twice.) One of the questions regarding Eisenstein today comes down to whether or not he was successful in subverting the state-mandated strait-jacket of his movies' material with his extraordinary visual voodoo. Free of historical intents or contexts, however, fascist art is usually heartbreaking in its naivete, but Eisenstein's movies seem embittered and angry, as if revolutionary discontent unconsciously expressed the artist's outrage that of all the nations in all the eras for the artist to be born into, it had to be this one.

Eisenstein was once regarded largely as cinema's most formidable intellectual, but his dialectic-based montage system was a theoretical Kahoutek, and his editing symbologies - equating Kerensky with a peacock in October (1927) - don't necessarily age well. (Not as salient commentary, anyway.) His entire filmmaking philosophy, though responsible for much that is deathless in movie history, was prefigured on a self-deifying cosmos: Eisenstein was the omniscient god, and the audience his easily manipulated minions. (Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, it could be said, have similar ideologies and formal approaches.) His most famous agitprop films click and whir like robots; it's no surprise that some of his most watchable films - Que Viva Mexico! (1932) and Alexander Nevsky (1938) - owe little to Hegelian schema and everything to full-tilt boogie expressionism. Everyone abandons dialectics sooner or later, and as the years and donnybrooks with the heads of state went by (Eisenstein was not only gay but rather more passionate about his artistic profile than his role as a propagandist), the filmmaker became entranced more by byzantine compositions than the ability to motivate the masses. Whereas Potemkin and October move like fast rivers of Leninist declamation, Ivan the Terrible (1945-46), coming after the baroque dreamtime of '30s Von Sternberg and the emergence of Welles, slows down to a shadowy, sculptured lurch.

Where does that leave Strike (1925), his first feature, for all intents and purposes the film that launched Soviet political filmmaking and the idea that montage was both a uniquely cinematic thrill tool and a formidable instrument for propaganda? The new restored video release - grab it on Blu-Ray if you can, your eyeballs will buy you a case of champagne later - is as apt an occasion as any for applying a fresh perspective to what might be Eisenstein's most personal film, the one he had the most fun making, the man's 400 Blows or Citizen Kane. For one thing, this razor-crisp blast from the past isn't quite as burdened with grim, commanding Communist purpose as Eisenstein's subsequent silents. It is, in fact, spritely, jaunty, ceaselessly inventive and, surprisingly enough if you haven't seen it in a few decades, witty.

As the title suggests, the story is a deliberately generic template for revolutionary action - Russian factory workers protest ill-treatment and poor wages, and are then spurned to a full-on strike after a framed compatriot hangs himself. Here, a strike is no dull narrative affair - the capitalists (all fat, cigar-smoking, cartoonish gluttons, of course) employ spies and Cossacks and even the fire department, and the espionage runs both ways, at a gallop. As with Eisenstein's other vintage agitprop classics, there is no single hero or villain, just crowds of collective will, in this case two colliding masses of human self-interest. But the electric pace and visual tumult keeps things charged with an almost slapstick personality. Eisenstein pulls out the stops: multiple exposures employed in an uncountable variety of ways, radical angles, cameras moving with/on top of factory equipment, expressionistically shaped iris ins and outs, even cut-out frames for creating a "fake" split-screen. And of course Strike is edited at a maniacal pace, full of rapid contrapuntal contrasts (if dialectic editing was or is good at anything, it's simply mustering visual excitement), as well as introducing the jump cut (not the Godard jump cut but the Scorsese jump cut), while also taking the time to follow a few pigeons lighting down on the stilled factory equipment, as the battles rage elsewhere.

The plastic thrust of Strike is rascally and comedic - sure, Eisenstein's juxtapositions are often ponderous (a giant factory wheel slows to a halt as three workers, faded in, cross the arms in defiance), but the sheer speed and esprit of the film lets him get away with it, as fast comedies can often get away with crude jokes if they keep moving quickly enough. Or is simplistic Communist imagery simply easier to swallow now, so many years after the fact? Indeed, when Eisenstein cuts from Cossacks suppressing a workers' meeting to four fatcat stockholders "squeezing juice" for their cocktails, the effect can be groan-worthy if you let it. Or the outrageous hyperbole can seem almost zesty and satirical by now, since the film is not historical but almost fantastical in its stereotypical portrait of social strata. Look at Strike, with its grotesque villains and backstabbing narrative gambits (a spy secretly photographing a protester with a camera shaped like a pocket-watch), as a retro comic-book saga of good and evil, and suddenly the chill over Soviet tactics fades and you have pure grade-A pulp.

The politics, too, emerge as stirring and lovely if you let them, since the film so relentlessly frames the workers' conflict as one of muscular courage, and since the workers were explicitly demanding the same rights - like an eight-hour work day - that workers all over the industrialized world had also been vying for in the pre-Revolutionary decades in which the tale is set. The famous dramatic peaks of the film - particularly the Cossack maliciously dropping an infant three stories to its death - remain powerful, enough so that Kino's discs bear a tiny warning about "violence" that some "may find disturbing." One can bet it's the only silent film to warrant such a labeling in 2011, and it's only due to Eisenstein's breathless artistry behind the camera and at the editing table.

Kino's discs come with sweet supplements: Eisenstein's rarely-seen 1923 short Glumov's Diary - an experimental tidbit made to be shown during a stage performance of Alexander Ostrovsky's play Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man - and a featurette doc, Natacha Laurent's Eisenstein and the Revolutionary Spirit (2008), that limns the historical context around Eisenstein's career.

For more information about Strike, visit Kino Lorber Films. To order Strike, go to TCM Shopping.

by Michael Atkinson

Strike - Sergei Eisenstein's STRIKE - The Remastered DVD Edition from Kino International

Once considered one of the great filmmakers who ever lived, and whose Battleship Potemkin (1925) was once judged by critics and directors to be the greatest film ever made, Sergei Eisenstein has seen his canonization come and go. Now merely a film school requirement, the name never attains front rank anymore - due to either the general collapse of Soviet Communism and therefore any need to take its culture seriously, or an evolution in taste away from montage pyrotechnics in silent film and toward the camera-movement poetics of the Murnau school, or the last half-century of silent-era discovery and reevaluation that has perhaps stolen the spotlight from Eisenstein's hectically edited, fiercely Bolshevik smart bombs. Like advertising, propaganda is made both useless and quaint by its inherent ephemerality; considering it as art years hence means tumbling into the rabbit-hole of kitsch. (Which we do; note the modern popularity of futurist design and the poster art of Alexander Rodochenko, who, if he were alive, could design my phone bill and I'd pay it twice.) One of the questions regarding Eisenstein today comes down to whether or not he was successful in subverting the state-mandated strait-jacket of his movies' material with his extraordinary visual voodoo. Free of historical intents or contexts, however, fascist art is usually heartbreaking in its naivete, but Eisenstein's movies seem embittered and angry, as if revolutionary discontent unconsciously expressed the artist's outrage that of all the nations in all the eras for the artist to be born into, it had to be this one. Eisenstein was once regarded largely as cinema's most formidable intellectual, but his dialectic-based montage system was a theoretical Kahoutek, and his editing symbologies - equating Kerensky with a peacock in October (1927) - don't necessarily age well. (Not as salient commentary, anyway.) His entire filmmaking philosophy, though responsible for much that is deathless in movie history, was prefigured on a self-deifying cosmos: Eisenstein was the omniscient god, and the audience his easily manipulated minions. (Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, it could be said, have similar ideologies and formal approaches.) His most famous agitprop films click and whir like robots; it's no surprise that some of his most watchable films - Que Viva Mexico! (1932) and Alexander Nevsky (1938) - owe little to Hegelian schema and everything to full-tilt boogie expressionism. Everyone abandons dialectics sooner or later, and as the years and donnybrooks with the heads of state went by (Eisenstein was not only gay but rather more passionate about his artistic profile than his role as a propagandist), the filmmaker became entranced more by byzantine compositions than the ability to motivate the masses. Whereas Potemkin and October move like fast rivers of Leninist declamation, Ivan the Terrible (1945-46), coming after the baroque dreamtime of '30s Von Sternberg and the emergence of Welles, slows down to a shadowy, sculptured lurch. Where does that leave Strike (1925), his first feature, for all intents and purposes the film that launched Soviet political filmmaking and the idea that montage was both a uniquely cinematic thrill tool and a formidable instrument for propaganda? The new restored video release - grab it on Blu-Ray if you can, your eyeballs will buy you a case of champagne later - is as apt an occasion as any for applying a fresh perspective to what might be Eisenstein's most personal film, the one he had the most fun making, the man's 400 Blows or Citizen Kane. For one thing, this razor-crisp blast from the past isn't quite as burdened with grim, commanding Communist purpose as Eisenstein's subsequent silents. It is, in fact, spritely, jaunty, ceaselessly inventive and, surprisingly enough if you haven't seen it in a few decades, witty. As the title suggests, the story is a deliberately generic template for revolutionary action - Russian factory workers protest ill-treatment and poor wages, and are then spurned to a full-on strike after a framed compatriot hangs himself. Here, a strike is no dull narrative affair - the capitalists (all fat, cigar-smoking, cartoonish gluttons, of course) employ spies and Cossacks and even the fire department, and the espionage runs both ways, at a gallop. As with Eisenstein's other vintage agitprop classics, there is no single hero or villain, just crowds of collective will, in this case two colliding masses of human self-interest. But the electric pace and visual tumult keeps things charged with an almost slapstick personality. Eisenstein pulls out the stops: multiple exposures employed in an uncountable variety of ways, radical angles, cameras moving with/on top of factory equipment, expressionistically shaped iris ins and outs, even cut-out frames for creating a "fake" split-screen. And of course Strike is edited at a maniacal pace, full of rapid contrapuntal contrasts (if dialectic editing was or is good at anything, it's simply mustering visual excitement), as well as introducing the jump cut (not the Godard jump cut but the Scorsese jump cut), while also taking the time to follow a few pigeons lighting down on the stilled factory equipment, as the battles rage elsewhere. The plastic thrust of Strike is rascally and comedic - sure, Eisenstein's juxtapositions are often ponderous (a giant factory wheel slows to a halt as three workers, faded in, cross the arms in defiance), but the sheer speed and esprit of the film lets him get away with it, as fast comedies can often get away with crude jokes if they keep moving quickly enough. Or is simplistic Communist imagery simply easier to swallow now, so many years after the fact? Indeed, when Eisenstein cuts from Cossacks suppressing a workers' meeting to four fatcat stockholders "squeezing juice" for their cocktails, the effect can be groan-worthy if you let it. Or the outrageous hyperbole can seem almost zesty and satirical by now, since the film is not historical but almost fantastical in its stereotypical portrait of social strata. Look at Strike, with its grotesque villains and backstabbing narrative gambits (a spy secretly photographing a protester with a camera shaped like a pocket-watch), as a retro comic-book saga of good and evil, and suddenly the chill over Soviet tactics fades and you have pure grade-A pulp. The politics, too, emerge as stirring and lovely if you let them, since the film so relentlessly frames the workers' conflict as one of muscular courage, and since the workers were explicitly demanding the same rights - like an eight-hour work day - that workers all over the industrialized world had also been vying for in the pre-Revolutionary decades in which the tale is set. The famous dramatic peaks of the film - particularly the Cossack maliciously dropping an infant three stories to its death - remain powerful, enough so that Kino's discs bear a tiny warning about "violence" that some "may find disturbing." One can bet it's the only silent film to warrant such a labeling in 2011, and it's only due to Eisenstein's breathless artistry behind the camera and at the editing table. Kino's discs come with sweet supplements: Eisenstein's rarely-seen 1923 short Glumov's Diary - an experimental tidbit made to be shown during a stage performance of Alexander Ostrovsky's play Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man - and a featurette doc, Natacha Laurent's Eisenstein and the Revolutionary Spirit (2008), that limns the historical context around Eisenstein's career. For more information about Strike, visit Kino Lorber Films. To order Strike, go to TCM Shopping. by Michael Atkinson

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1925

Released in United States 1998

Released in United States June 1999

Released in United States November 1997

Released in United States on Video May 11, 1999

Released in United States September 1998

Shown at Gijon International Film Festival (out of competition) in Spain November 21-28, 1997.

Shown at Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in New York City (Walter Reade) June 11-24, 1999.

Shown at New York Film Festival (Special Event) September 25 - October 11, 1998.

Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 3-7, 1998.

Released in United States 1925

Released in United States 1998 (Shown at New York Film Festival (Special Event) September 25 - October 11, 1998.)

Released in United States June 1999 (Shown at Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in New York City (Walter Reade) June 11-24, 1999.)

Began filming March 25, 1925.

Feature directorial debut for Sergei Eisenstein.

Released in United States 1998 (Shown at the 1998 New York Film Festival as a newly restored 35 mm print.)

Released in United States November 1997 (Shown at Gijon International Film Festival (out of competition) in Spain November 21-28, 1997.)

Released in United States on Video May 11, 1999

Shown at the 1998 New York Film Festival as a newly restored 35 mm print.

Released in United States September 1998 (Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 3-7, 1998.)