Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 13 -- An inevitable
consequence of a crisis like the coronavirus pandemic that so dominates the
news media in Russia and elsewhere is that some journalists will seek out stories
about topics as far removed from what people are living through and suffering with
as possible. Some of these are amusing and some even revelatory.
One such is offered by Yaroslav
Solonin on the Life.ru portal entitled “Stalin’s favorite erotic film
and toplessness in Soviet films” (life.ru/p/1313976
reposted at newvz.ru/info/182190.html),
something unexpected given Stalin’s puritanical reputation and the meme from
the times of the USSR that “there is no sex in the Soviet Union.”
In spite of that opinion, the
journalist says, “the first undressed woman appeared already under Stalin. This
year is the 90th anniversary of the appearance of Dovzhenko’s The
Land, where the first open scene was shown. And in each of the succeeding
decades, several films with piquant subjects came out.”
Some criticized the partial nude
scenes in the movie as “paganism,” Solonin reports, but “Stalin highly rated
the work of the actress.” He even recommended that she be given more roles. Dovzhenko’s
film was banned until 1960, however, and thus “unfortunately,” the journalist
says, Soviet viewers associate Elena Maksimova “more with roles of old women.”
In 1956, another Soviet film, Grigory
Chukhay’s “41” also featured an erotic scene between a Bolshevik woman and a
white guard. And in 1966, Andrey Tarkovsky’s “Andrey Rublyov,” now considered “a
model of Orthodox creativity,” appeared with a nude scene. The director himself said he was more
inspired by paganism than by Christianity.
More sex scenes began to appear in
the 1970s and in perestroika times.
Indeed, Solonin says, at that time, “erotic scenes were filmed at the
brink of pornography,” opening the way to the anything goes films of the
post-Soviet period.
Sergey Kudryavtsev, a film critic, tells
Solonin that in Soviet times, “erotic elements were most often allowed in
military dramas and in pictures about villages, in the military ones in order
to counterpose love and war and to show that life goes on and in films about the
village to stress the natural, spontaneous and popular nature of life there.”
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