La película «Queridos camaradas», una rebelión obrera contra la burocracia en la URSS kaosenlared.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kaosenlared.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
7:30 AM 4/6/2021
by
Steve Chagollan and Carolyn Giardina
From affliction to massacre, the subjects dictate the aesthetic of these three celebrated DP pros.
Courtesy of Oldenburg Film Festival
The American Society of Cinematographers’ Spotlight category, introduced in 2014 to focus on DPs working with more limited budgets and less conspicuous marketing including those operating in the foreign language realm features one of the few women (Katelin Arizmendi) nominated across the ASC’s seven competitive groupings. The winner will be announced during the organization’s 35th annual ceremony, being staged virtually from the ASC Clubhouse in Hollywood on April 18. Here they give a taste of their modus operandi, aesthetic and inspirations.
Andrei Konchalovsky’s “Dear Comrades!” dramatizes the deadly events of June 2, 1962, when Soviet government forces fired into a crowd of unarmed protesters in the southern Russian city of Novocherkassk.
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Andrei Konchalovsky’s “Dear Comrades!” dramatizes the deadly events of June 2, 1962, when Soviet government forces fired into a crowd of unarmed protesters in the southern Russian city of Novocherkassk. It took 30 years for the tragedy to be revealed and reckoned with: The bodies were buried in secret and all news of the bloody crackdown was meticulously suppressed, never to be officially investigated and brought to light until 1992, after the Soviet Union’s collapse. Another three decades would pass before the massacre would be memorialized in Konchalovsky’s blistering new film, the latest fascinating object in a career that has swerved unpredictably from Russia to Hollywood and back again. (The movie has been chosen to represent Russia in the Oscar race for international feature.)