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Alex Graham (果冻影院 SSEES): Gennadii Shpalikov and the Cinema of Impossibility

23 April 2018, 6:00 pm鈥8:00 pm

Shpalikov

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Russian Cinema Research Group

Location

Room 433, 果冻影院 SSEES

Alex Graham (果冻影院 SSEES) will speak on the following topic: Gennadii Shpalikov and the Cinema of Impossibility: Auteurism, Cinephilia and Politics from VGIK to Lenfil'm at this seminar organised by the Russian Cinema Research Group.

Gennadii Shpalikov was a unique literary talent and widely considered the most promising young screenwriter of his generation, until a change in political epochs coincided with a desperate personal unravelling to precipitate the tragic decline of this poet, lyricist and filmmaker, who took his own life at the age of 37. This is the summation conventionally bequeathed to us in the recent broadcasts, memoirs and popular histories that have woven a generationally emblematic mythology around Shpalikov鈥檚 persona. Today, the custodial devotion of his shestidesiatniki friends meets the unapologetically persistent notion of 鈥楾haw鈥 culture wherever their 鈥淢ozart among us鈥 is celebrated, mourned and speculated about. However, beyond a wealth of compelling anecdotes, a handful of remarkable encounters and one wildly popular song about Walking the Streets of Moscow, there is a body of profoundly original and critically neglected artistic output that includes Shpalikov鈥檚 only directorial work. A Long, Happy Life is one of the Soviet 1960s鈥 most aesthetically atypical films. It demonstrates the extent to which certain of the recently formed, permanent 鈥榗reative units鈥 in major Soviet feature-film studios had become empowered enough to pursue ambitiously innovative production strategies. Nonetheless, as the ground beneath these institutions shifted towards a politically reinforced conservatism, the shestidesiatniki intelligentsia began to explore (and repress) its disillusionment with the period of cultural possibility seemingly bookended by the 20th party congress in 1956 and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Shpalikov鈥檚 directorial debut was a statement of enchanted cinephilia and of disenchantment with the 鈥榬eal鈥 at the crux of this historical moment, after which the continuation of his filmmaking career became a political and a personal impossibility.

My seminar will explore the idea of the impossible as a theme in Shpalikov鈥檚 artistic output and a reality in his written correspondence and professional conduct. Irreconcilability 鈥 of the 鈥榟igh鈥 to the 鈥榣ow鈥, of the magical to the everyday, of Shpalikov himself to the compromises exacted by his time 鈥 is, to my mind, the key concern of the lyrical fabric and exalted emotional pitch in this body of work. Here, I will address the cultural preoccupations that inform the prevailing Shpalikov myth, provide a historical context for his ascent and decline as a filmmaker, and use the example of A Long, Happy Life to orientate a broader discussion of the impossible dreams, desires and personal relationships that make up the Shpalikovian vision of life, in text and on film.

Alex Graham is a PhD candidate and Wolfson Foundation scholar at 果冻影院 SSEES. His doctoral research focuses on the politics of film production at the Lenfil'm studio in the years between 1961 and 1991. It combines the study of innovation in film aesthetics and changing institutional structures to ask how late-Soviet cinema functioned as a creative industry and an ideological system. Alex has written on the cinema of Aleksei German Sr. (Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema, 6, 2012, 2, pp. 177-216) and maintains an active research interest in the work of this filmmaker. His recent collaborations in screening Russian and Soviet cinema include participation in the Kino Klassika season 'A World to Win: A Century of Revolution on Screen', as well as the BIMI Essay Film Festival, the Open City Documentary Festival and the SSEES Centenary Film Festival.

All Welcome to attend, no registration is required.

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