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ISSE meetings in Britain to screen Tsar to Lenin
Documenting the last days of Tsarist Russia and the birth
of the new Soviet Union
By Richard Tyler
28 November 2007
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This week the International Students for Socialist Equality
are organising a series of meetings on campuses in Glasgow, Cardiff,
Manchester and Brighton to mark the 90th anniversary of the Russian
Revolution with a special showing of Herman Axelbanks film,
Tsar to Lenin. The following is a review of this remarkable
documentary.
Tsar to Lenin documents the end of Imperial Russia,
the October Revolution led by Lenin and Trotsky, and the emergence
of the new Soviet government headed by the Bolsheviks.
The following is the introduction to Tsar to Lenin,
with text and narration by Max Eastman:
This picture has taken 13 years to prepare. The films
come from the ends of the earth. They were made by over a hundred
different cameramen during the revolution from one hundred different
angles.
Some were taken by the Tsars royal photographer,
some by the Tsar himself, some by the Soviet photographer, some
by the German General Staff, some by the staff photographers with
the French, English and Japanese armies of Occupation. Others
were taken by American War Correspondents and still others by
private adventurers.
Some of the pictures were designed to be used as propaganda
for the White Armies, others for the Red. Every event recorded
in this film is authentic and has been placed in the correct chronological
sequence, without any attempt to take sides in that bloody conflict,
or defend any man or any class of men.
The striving for an objective portrayal of one of the most
significant events of the twentieth centurythe first time
the working class had conquered powermeant that Axelbanks
film showed the central role played by Leon Trotsky, as co-leader
of the revolution and head of the Red Army.
This earned the film and its maker the hatred of Stalin and
the bureaucracy he headed, with Axelbank suffering intimidation
and thefts from his archive, and a later fire at his film storage
facility.
At a time when official Soviet historiography had eliminated
all references to Trotsky, Axelbank had assembled a documentary
that provided incontrovertible proof of his essential role in
the revolution and its subsequent defence against counter-revolutionary
White armies and the six imperialist armies of intervention that
tried to strangle the revolution at birth.
First shown at the height of the purges, in which hundreds
and thousands of socialists who opposed Stalin were being liquidated,
the films premier at the Filmarte Theater in New York on
March 6, 1937, was met by pickets from the pro-Stalin American
Communist Party.
Herman Axelbank diligently applied his fascination with the
ability of film to document great historical experiences, finding
inspiration in the events of 1917 in Russia and their aftermath.
He came from the village of Novokonstantinov, which today is
in the Ukraine, but in 1900, when he was born, was part of the
Imperial Russian Empire of Tsar Nicholas II. The small village
had a predominantly Jewish population. According to an 1899 record,
of some 2,855 inhabitants more than 1,800 were Jews.
In 1909, Axelbanks father moved the family to New York,
like many Russian émigrés seeking a better life
in the United States.
Since childhood, Axelbank had been fascinated by filmmaking,
and this passionate interest was to mark his adult life. In 1916,
the young Axelbank started working as an office boy for the Goldwyn
Picture Corporation.
In 1917, when news of the February Revolution reached New York,
Axelbank recalled telling a co-worker, I wish I could take
moving pictures over there; we dont have any of our own
[American Revolution] in 1775.
In 1918, Axelbank listened to a lecture given by the American
journalist John Reed, whose first-hand account of the revolution
was later portrayed in his book, Ten Days that Shook the World.
Axelbanks film also includes footage of Reed attending a
meeting of the Communist International.
Luckily, Axelbank had made the acquaintance of a cameraman
who had been commissioned to travel to eastern Europe. Scraping
together money he borrowed from friends and pawning some of his
most treasured possessions, he hired the cameraman to travel to
Russia and film the unfolding events and their leading figures.
When the cameraman returned in 1922, Axelbank took possession
of film showing Lenin and Trotsky speaking. He also now had footage
from the Kronstadt Rebellion of March 1921 and the trial of the
Socialist Revolutionaries of 1922. This formed the first reels
of what was to become an extensive archive of film material documenting
the last days of Tsarist Russia and the birth of the new Soviet
Union.
Axelbank went on to acquire film that had been taken from the
fronts of the various contending powers in World War I, as well
as obtaining footage showing the Provisional Government that took
office on the abdication of Tsar Nicholas. He was also able to
purchase contemporary material shot during the October Revolution
itself and from the funeral of Lenin in 1924.
In 1928, Axelbank contacted the eminent American socialist
Max Eastman, hiring him to write and narrate the text to accompany
the film. Eastman, who translated Trotskys seminal History
of the Russian Revolution, travelled to the Turkish island
of Prinkipo, where he filmed Trotsky in exile with his family.
Axelbank and Eastman then worked together for more than a year
editing and refining the footage.
Throughout his life, Axelbank continued to collect footage
documenting the Soviet Union, his archive finally encompassing
some 266 reels containing more than 250,000 feet of film. The
first 40 reels, covering a span from 1901 to 1937, contain material
that is extremely rare and some that is unique.
Incorporating this footage into Tsar to Lenin has produced
an exceptional film. It provides eyewitness testimony to the greatest
event of the last century.
University of Sussex
Wednesday, November 28, 5:30 p.m.
University Conference Centre,
Level Three Bramber House,
Brighton
University of Glasgow
Thursday, November 29, 5:30 p.m.
Room 507 (Lecture Room C) Boyd Orr Building
Glasgow
University of Manchester
Friday, November 30, 6 p.m.
The International Society (opposite UMSU)
327 Oxford Road
Manchester
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