Battleship Potemkin

(Bronenosets Potyomkin)

New 35mm Print!

To see Potemkin in its restored glory, complete with Edmund Meisel’s pulse-pounding score recorded by a fifty-five-piece orchestra, is to be astonished anew at what a dazzling piece of virtuoso filmmaking this is. Packed with movement, incident and beauty, this is no fusty museum piece but a thrilling jolt of pure cinematic adrenaline.

Kenneth Turan, LA Times
featuring

Alexander Antonov, Grigori Alexandrov, Vladimir Barsky, Mikhail Gomorov,

Instructed to make a film to commemorate the 1905 revolution, Eisenstein chose to base his script on the mutiny on the battleship Potemkin of the Black Sea Fleet and the ensuing involvement of the people of Odessa. The sailors’ revolt is both premise and metaphor for a tale told virtually entirely through images and their rhythmic juxtaposition and repetition, the purest cinema imaginable; the massacre on the Odessa steps is justifiably one of the most celebrated sequences in film history. But perhaps Potemkin’s triumph is, as historian Georges Sadoul wrote, “not only the perfection of its form, but the humanitarianism and enthusiasm that impregnated its revolutionary subject.”

FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Sergei Eisenstein
Cinematographer
  • Eduard Tissé
Language
  • Silent
Print Info
  • B&W
  • 35mm
  • Silent