Irina Evteeva’s debut quickly became a kind of manifesto for the one-room experimental studio: it defines classification by interweaving animation, appropriated footage, feature and documentary to form a unique whole, a film that rushes backwards into the future, thereby re-inventing Futurism. Mayakovskiy is the star; his occasional presence holds together a film driven by the sound, the beat, of his poetry. Evteeva develops a dramatic structure of flaring, fading, being from light: violin strings become rays, quivering dull yellow spots, pictures. The plot assails the material from which it derives energy from material. History, growling and roaring, finds its form.
Title | The Horse, the Violin and a Little Bit Nervous |
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Year | 1991 |
Genre | Animation, Fantasy |
Country | Soviet Union |
Studio | Lenfilm, PIEF Film Studio |
Cast | Georgi Traugot, Margarita Bychkova, Semyon Furman, Boris Cherdyntsev, Tatyana Reshetnikova, Anatoli Petrov |
Crew | Irina Evteeva (Director), Genrikh Marandzhyan (Director of Photography), Tamara Denisova (Editor), Irina Evteeva (Writer), Irina Evteeva (Production Design), Dmitri Shostakovich (Music) |
Keyword | short film |
Release | Jan 01, 1991 |
Runtime | 27 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 7.00 / 10 by 1 users |
Popularity | 0 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | Pусский |