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Sunday, Aug 9, 1992
Ukraine in Flames
This is an extraordinary montage film, weaving images taken by twenty-four frontline cameramen, plus captured Nazi footage, into essentially the same story as The Flaming Years: that of the Ukraine before, during, and after the German invasion. "This belongs to a genre that might be termed 'transcendental newsreel,'' wrote Gilbert Adair, "documentary material transfigured by genius." One can imagine that Dovzhenko and Solntseva developed their own cinematic aesthetic from just this kind of harrowing footage of life as it really was. In their treatment, it is history working horizontally, in broad strokes, stopping here and there to touch a human being. Juxtaposition gives us: weeping women filling in mass graves; dead children in a gorgeous landscape of sunflowers and lowering skies; the parade of people on the land crossing the endless procession of soldiers; farmers walking by the open grave of a dead peasant; battles, bombs, and planes and a man's shirt hanging from a tree; a screaming skeleton; a lake full of swans. Note: Our print is without English subtitles, however we feel that the images speak for themselves. A written synopsis of the voice-over narration will be provided.
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