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2005 (2)

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Yellow crocodiles and blue oranges : Russian animated film since World War Two
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ISBN: 128286338X 9786612863387 0773572724 9780773572720 0773528717 9780773528710 6612863382 Year: 2005 Publisher: Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press,

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Abstract

MacFadyen further analyses Soviet animation through phenomenology, arguing that the latter is a viable alternative not only to dogmatic Marxism but also to the ideological vacuum of post-Soviet times. The book includes a comprehensive bibliography and filmography as well as a rich collection of images.


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Yuri Norstein and Tale of tales : an animator's journey
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ISBN: 9780861966462 0861966465 Year: 2005 Publisher: Eastleigh, UK John Libbey

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Abstract

In June 2002, the Zagreb Animation Festival published the results of an international, four-year poll to establish the best animated film of all time. The winner was not Japanese anime, Disney or Wallace and Gromit, but a 1979 film by Russian animator Yuri Norstein. "Tale of Tales" fuses Norstein's memories of his past and hopes and fears for the future: his post-war childhood, remnants of the personal tragedies of war, the little wolf character in the lullaby his mother used to sing, the neighbours in his crowded communal flat, the tango played in the park on summer evenings - and the small working-class boy's longing to emerge from the dark central corridor of the kommunalka into a luminous world of art and poetry. Yet when "Tale of Tales" was first delivered to Goskino, the body then responsible for all Soviet cinema activity, it had caused consternation. How, in a system still geared to the principles of Socialist Realism, where all studios' script departments teemed with KGB informants, had they ended up with this poetic, impressionistic amalgam. This book examines the passage of these motifs into the film but it also looks into later influences that affected it: the officially-sanctioned anti-Semitism under Stalin that launched the boy on a campaign of self-education in the arts, in an attempt to shake off the 'second class citizen' label; the period of Khrushchev's Thaw which, coinciding with Norstein's teens and early twenties, introduced new ideas and the habit of independent thought; then a spell in a furniture factory, followed by seven years as an animator on other directors' often pedestrian films, through which he acquired an extraordinary range of technical skills; and a clash with the authorities over his debut film, which persuaded him never again to compromise.

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