The top three directors of Soviet Era during the Silent Era were Sergei Eisenstein, Alexander Dovzhenko, and Vesevolod Pudovkin. While Eisenstein is still readily available in quality home video offerings, the same could not be said of the other two until this Blu-Ray release of 3 classic Pudovkin titles. All three were previously issued on DVD by Kino back around the turn of the century and this is an upgraded version of those releases. While MOTHER and THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG are virtually the same, STORM OVER ASIA has improved sonic and picture quality thanks to a digital restoration.
MOTHER (1926) was Pudovkin’s first feature film and it follows the fate of a poor Russian woman who is married to a drunken, brutal husband and whose son hopes for a better life. The setting is 1905, the date of the aborted first Russian uprising and it pits father against son. Both work at the same factory but take different sides in the conflict. Finally the mother becomes involved in the conflict with tragic results. Pudovkin’s use of faces and especially his montage editing (inspired by D.W. Griffith’s INTOLERANCE) create a powerful drama with the proper pro-Soviet viewpoint.
THE END OF SAINT PETERSBURG (1927), which was made to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, is more abstract in style following the example of Sergei Eisenstein in his films STRIKE and BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN. It focuses on two Russian peasants who go to St Petersburg in search of work only to wind up fighting in World War I before getting caught up in the Revolution. While the imagery, especially those of trench warfare is astonishing, the story is very persuasive Soviet propaganda. The trademark use of montage editing is really utilized in the film’s finale.
The crown jewel of the set as far as I am concerned is STORM OVER ASIA (1928) which should have kept its original title of THE HEIR TO GENGHIS KHAN. This story of a young Mongolian nomad who is believed to be descended from Genghis Khan is far less a polemic than a character study not only of him but of the Mongolian people. The film records an authentic Buddhist ceremony that still has the power to astound and enthrall over 90 years later. We follow the main character from nomad to Soviet fighter to a potential pawn of the British Empire as a puppet king. The so-called “storm” doesn’t occur until the very end.
As mentioned earlier, all three of these titles were released by Kino before going out of print and leaving only poor public domain copies available to the public until now. This new Blu-Ray edition by Flicker Alley is an upgrade of the old Kino editions with ASIA looking the best. Both MOTHER and ST PETERSBURG are still in pretty rough shape print wise but all three have good music soundtracks with Timothy Brock’s ethnic flavored score for ASIA being the standout. Bonuses include a 16 page booklet, audio commentary, features on montage editing, and Pudovkin’s short comedy CHESS FEVER.