Soviet Monttage Scenes In The Soviet Montage Film By David Bordwell

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David Bordwell defines the Soviet montage style as one which uses ‘an assemblage of shots’ to ‘build a narrative… to control rhythm, to create metaphors, and to make rhetorical points’ (9). Thereafter, he states that the montage ‘creates a new synthesis, an overall meaning that lies not within each part but in the very fact of juxtaposition’ (9). Robert Stam reiterates this idea arguing that to montage theorists ‘the filmic shot…gained meaning…only relationally, as part of a larger system’ (38). It is brought up by both writers, however, that there was a ‘diversity of…film styles’ amongst the Soviet filmmakers ‘despite a certain broad agreement on the foundations of montage’ (Stam, 38; Bordwell, 9). This response will examine the complexity …show more content…

He also posits that ‘whereas the standard explanations for the flowering of montage have emphasized the role of Kuleshov’, ‘the larger context of Soviet artistic activity of the time’ in which ‘Vertov and Eisenstein were working’ reveals ‘that the principle of montage was a salient strategy of much avant-garde Soviet art’ (Bordwell, 10; 11). It is clear from the above that the montage style was thus employed differently by individual filmmakers who made use of the montage editing techniques to bring out their respective aesthetic visions within their …show more content…

Despite the loss of “montage” as an aesthetic vision in contemporary films, we see how “montage” as an editing technique had in fact contributed greatly to filmmaking as we know it today. While the continuity style’s emphasis is on the narrative as well as clear, understandable space and time, the montage style focuses on creating impact with different images juxtaposing against one another. It is hence clear that the Soviet montage style has given filmmakers new ways to express certain ideas that might have previously been limited by the continuity style – giving filmmaking greater nuance and complexity as an art form with its own unique

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