UKRAINIAN MASTERPIECES: Earth - Земля (1930) - Dovzhenko

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • Discovering and inspecting Dovzhenko's masterpiece of Ukrainian cinema named Earth (Zemlya) from 1930, covering its historical context, themes and more distinguishable features that turn it into a film classic.
    Earth DVD:
    www.mrbongo.co...
    Hryhory Skovoroda - The Garden of Divine Songs and Collected Poetry:
    glagoslav.com/...
    Ivan Franko - Poems and Stories:
    www.abebooks.c...

Комментарии • 38

  • @skydavidhealth
    @skydavidhealth 4 года назад +7

    This is such a grand expose' of rare cinema history. There is a poetic documentary that was made by Paradjanov called "Ukrainian Rhapsody" that was made in the original Ukrainian
    language/dialect that was used by the separatists that so offended Stalin that its production is believed to be the real reason that Stalin had Paradjanov jailed (not to mention the fact that Armenians were an "irritation" to Stalin. Thanks for the link.

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  4 года назад +3

      Hey, thanks for the suggestion. I thought "Ukrainian Rhapsody" was a fiction film from Parajanov, I'll have a look at it in the near future, looks quite intriguing.

    • @skydavidhealth
      @skydavidhealth 4 года назад +5

      @@PlanSéquenceFilmArt It is so poetic and lyrical that it does not fall into conventional documentary. It was empowering to the Ukrainian separatists and thus suppressed and Paradjanov jailed on made up charges. Stalin was at war with culture, many examples like the execution of the great poet Nikolai Gumilev (trumped up charges).

    • @vivi5022
      @vivi5022 4 года назад +5

      in the film Ukrainian Rhapsody by Parajanov, they speak pure Russian language

    • @yaramelnychenko4633
      @yaramelnychenko4633 3 года назад +4

      @@skydavidhealth sorry, but you kind of got it wrong. First of all, Ukrainian language is not a dialect. Second of all, the people you called separatists were dissidents, which is a completely different thing. Ukrainians were fighting for their independence since, at first, the Russian Empire colonized a part of Ukraine, and then the bolsheviks occupied Ukraine. For centuries Russians have been trying to destroy Ukrainian culture with its constant repressions against everything Ukrainian (language, literature, education, etc.) and physical demolition (Holodomor, Executed Renaissance, etc.). I will leave some links concerning the things I've said. Please, educate yourself before misinforming somebody. Anyway, I hope you're having a nice day!
      www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CD%5CI%5CDissidentmovement.htm
      ukrainer.net/thread-en/holodomor-en/
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executed_Renaissance
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ukrainian_dissidents
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_Ukrainian_language_suppression

  • @epichaiku
    @epichaiku 2 года назад +2

    I so appreciate your video essays! Thank you for all you put into them.

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  2 года назад +1

      Thank so much your kind words, Natalie. It's rewarding to know people find something meaningful or useful in these film expositions. Cheers!

  • @RB-fp8hn
    @RB-fp8hn 3 года назад +7

    That shot of windswept farmland (grassland?) reminds me of a beautiful shot from Tarkovsky's Mirror. There were repeated waves created on the long grass, and it is said that Tarkovsky used a helicopter to achieve that effect. So glad I found your channel!

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  3 года назад +3

      Hey RB! As mentioned on the essay, this film left a deep impression in the young Andrei tarkovsky. I wouldn't be surprised if that magical image in Mirror was in one way or another inspired by Dovzhenko's Earth. Glad you've enjoyed the content on the channel.

    • @user-gg6sh7wr6d
      @user-gg6sh7wr6d 2 года назад +2

      also the dreamy shot of the apples at the end of Earth, reminds me of the dream sequence in Ivan's Childhood. Tarkovsky was definitely inspired. Both are masters.

    • @user-gg6sh7wr6d
      @user-gg6sh7wr6d 2 года назад

      Oops, I just noticed you mention the apples already near the end of the video, my mistake.

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  2 года назад

      @@user-gg6sh7wr6d Indeed, my friend.

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      Andrey s neurodepres overrat

  • @Razdva050
    @Razdva050 Год назад +2

    thank you for creating this

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  Год назад +1

      Glad you've enjoyed it, my friend. If you'd like, check my other video I made for Ukraine: ruclips.net/video/fYTYIwxF9nY/видео.html

    • @Razdva050
      @Razdva050 Год назад +1

      @@PlanSéquenceFilmArt wonderful, thank you for your efforts and heart that you've contributed into this! 🙏

  • @hugoclarke3284
    @hugoclarke3284 2 года назад +1

    We owe you a great deal for this

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  2 года назад

      It's an immense pleasure to be able to exchange thoughts and impressions with other cinephiles. Thank you for your appreciation.

  • @user-iq8nb3nc7u
    @user-iq8nb3nc7u 2 года назад +4

    Dovgenko - Ukrainian poetic cinema

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  2 года назад +2

      Indeed, Dovzhenko may be aptly described as the father of Ukrainian Poetic Cinema, with an influence that extended over the entire world.

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      Soviet, doesn't it?

    • @Razdva050
      @Razdva050 Год назад

      @@cinemagraphymahivara2000 can we call then Remark or Herman Hesse a Nazi-German/ Vermaht writers? Or Dostoevskiy a russian empire writer?

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      @@Razdva050 yes, it is so, man.

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      @@Razdva050 yes, it is so, man.

  • @andriisukhariev
    @andriisukhariev 10 месяцев назад +1

    Oleksandr

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, my friend, it has been acknowledged for future reference. My next video is also about another Ukrainian masterpiece and I reference Oleksandr Dovzhenko again, stay tuned for next Friday! з найкращими побажаннями!

  • @silvalysan8479
    @silvalysan8479 Год назад +2

    Non sovietico. Ma cittadino ucraino Dovzenko

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  Год назад +1

      Il film è stato prodotto in quella che allora era l'Unione Sovietica, da un uomo ucraino. Da qui la classificazione del film sovietico.

  • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
    @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

    You could just translated russian or ukrainian review of him.
    Olexander is not of one who cancelled among directors, it's just practice, and not cause of ukraine

  • @yulian5627
    @yulian5627 2 года назад +5

    Ukrainian masterpieces*

    • @PlanSéquenceFilmArt
      @PlanSéquenceFilmArt  2 года назад +2

      It's surely a masterpiece of Ukrainian spirit produced under the Soviet regime, so it definitely stands as one of the finest representative works of Ukrainian art.

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      I from Russia Kuban, and Dovzshenko also OUR director in this meaning(I even don't speak about his wife Solntceva from Moscow)

    • @cinemagraphymahivara2000
      @cinemagraphymahivara2000 Год назад

      @@PlanSéquenceFilmArt also there's Levko Revutsky, great russian ukrainian artist (composer, with ethnic folk elements too). That's his music in original earth

    • @yulian5627
      @yulian5627 Год назад +2

      @@cinemagraphymahivara2000 umm, in what worlds is he “your director”? Just another historical figure russian empire has been trying to steal, hell no

    • @yulian5627
      @yulian5627 Год назад +2

      @@cinemagraphymahivara2000 howwww is ge russian? Would you care to explain? He was born in Ukraine and died there. the only reason there are russian cultural figures with ukrainian roots it because russian/soviet government would eliminate and destroy everything related to Ukraine
      And look where we are now)

  • @robertocavalcanti3213
    @robertocavalcanti3213 11 месяцев назад +1

    Got history facts all wrong
    Strongly ideologicoly biesed