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Earth (1930, Soviet Union)
(aka Zemlya, or
Земля, or Soil)
In Aleksandr Dovzhenko's expressionistic, pro-collectivism
propaganda story (a lyrical
"film poem") and rural drama about agricultural progress
- it masterfully depicted the class-warfare struggle in the Ukraine
between poor, tenant-farming Socialist peasants (engaged in collective
farming who united together to purchase a tractor), opposed by villainous,
power-seeking, threatened capitalist Kulak (authoritarian and wealthy
landowners):
- the ending scene involving the pagan funeral of
Bolshevik Vasyl (Basil) (Semyon Svashenko), who had been shot in
the back and slain at night by crazed Khoma (Thomas) Whitehorse
(Pyotr Masokha), the eldest son of the area's dominant and hostile
Kulak family; during the singing at his funeral procession, Basil
was carried alongside a field of huge sunflowers, while his naked
lamenting fiancee Natalya (Yelena Maksimova) reacted with frenzied
grief in a bedroom
- the dramatic scenes, in a montage, of Khoma (a representation
of the Kulaks) confessing his guilt to the massive group of socialist
mourners, that he murdered Basil under a harvest moon at a crossroads
as he was dancing a hopak: ("I killed him in the night!!!...in
the night, when everything was asleep. But he was walking down the
lane and dancing"); also, Khoma made affirmations that the land
still belonged to him ("It's my earth. I won't give it up")
and that he would continue to resist collectivization; but his words
and pleadings ("Hey, poor people, it's me!") were ignored
by the mourners; to get attention from everyone, he stuck his head
in the dirt as he ran in circles, and then he shouted out: "Beat
me -- I'll die before I give up!"
Khoma's Affirmations Ignored
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- the last images included a cleansing downpour of
life-giving rain falling on large shimmering apples in an orchard
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The Pagan Funeral For Basil
Laments of Basil's Fiancee Natalya
Mourners at Basil's Funeral
Khoma: "Beat me - I'll die before I give up!"
Cleansing Downpour on Large Apples
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