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Battleship Potemkin and Beyond: Film and Revolutionary Politics
- Dissent
- University of Pennsylvania Press
- Volume 58, Number 3, Summer 2011
- pp. 90-95
- 10.1353/dss.2011.0076
- Article
- Additional Information
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[Battleship Potemkin] provided not only a thrilling account of a collective uprising but a virtual textbook in how film editing could excite sympathy, fear, and revolutionary anger. The film’s purpose was no less propagandistic than Leni Riefenstahl’s Nazi productions of the 1930s, especially Triumph of the Will, but its themes were humane: not exalting the irrational cult of a supreme leader but dramatizing the oppressive violence of Russia’s old regime; the basic, universal longing for human dignity; and a bright but brief springtime of freedom and solidarity.