- Aelita
Infobox Film
name = Aelita
caption = A 1927 poster
amg_id = 1:1083
imdb_id = 0014646
director =Yakov Protazanov
producer =
writer =Fedor Ozep
starring =Yulia Solntseva Igor Ilyinsky Nikolai Tsereteli Nikolai Batalov Vera Orlova
music =
cinematography =Yuri Zhelyabuzhsky
editing =
released =
runtime = 113 min.
country =USSR
language =Silent film
Russian intertitles
budget =
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Aelita" ( _ru. Аэлита), also known as "Aelita: Queen of Mars", is a silent
film directed by Soviet filmmaker Yakov Protazanov made on Mezhrabpom-Rus film studio and released in 1924. It was based on Alexei Tolstoy's novel of the same name.Mikhail Zharov and Igor Ilyinsky were cast in leading roles.Though the main focus of the story is the daily lives of a small group of people during the post-war Soviet Union, the enduring importance of the film comes from its early science fiction elements. It primarily tells of a young man, Los' ( _ru. Лось, literary
Elk ), traveling to Mars in arocket ship, where he leads a popular uprising against the king, with the support of Queen Aelita who has fallen in love with him after watching him through atelescope .Probably the first full-length movie about space travel, the most notable part of the film remains its remarkable constructivist Martian sets and costumes designed by
Aleksandra Ekster . Their influence can be seen in a number of later films, including theFlash Gordon serials and probablyFritz Lang 's Metropolis. While very popular at first, the film later fell out of favor with the Soviet government and was thus very difficult to see until after the Cold War.Ideological significance
During the climax of the film, Gusev (the
Bolshevik revolutionary soldier) stages aproletarian revolution with Queen Aelita's help. While these scenes may seem propagandistic, in some ways the movie is anti-revolutionary. Both Gusev and Los escape to Mars because of their dissatisfaction with domestic life; Gusev's wife is over-protective and he longs for revolution, and Los seemingly kills his wife in passionate anger. Furthermore, Aelita allows the revolution to happen only so that she can overthrow thedictator ship that keeps her from ruling. After the army falls under the sway of the revolutionaries, Aelita commands the soldiers to force the worker slaves back underground. Los kills Aelita to stop her from taking over, seeing her as his wife - he then wakes up, aware that the scenes on Mars were entirely fantasy, and goes home to find that his wife is still alive.Aelita's manipulation is directly opposed to what she represents to Los, and serves as a stunning reminder of how revolution can go wrong. The not-so-subtle implications of Aelita's manipulation of the revolution obviously point towards
Lenin 's own revolution. While Natasha (Los's wife) is presented as a symbol of communism and the movie has a decidedly pro-communist stance, revolution is carried out by flawed characters, all of whom are opposed to the domestic life the director so lovingly presents. Indeed, Protazanov's film points not to revolution as a tool for growth, but rather rebuilding - the Russian Revolution isn't the backdrop for the film, but rather Lenin'sNew Economic Policy period of mild capitalism used for rebuilding afterWorld War I .According to another reading of the film, the character of Aelita represents the forces of the
Russian Provisional Government of February to October 1917, or that of the GermanSPD , both having recently taken the leadership of popular revolutions, but then trying to restrict them by siding with repression and counter-revolution.Fact|date=July 2008ee also
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Mars in fiction External links
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* [http://www.ce-review.org/00/1/kinoeye1_horton.html "Science Fiction of the Domestic" by Andrew J. Horton]
* [http://www.ruscico.com/dvd.php?lang=en&dvd=409 Multi-language DVD released by RUSCICO]
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