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Boris Barnet

 
Director: Boris Barnet
  • Born: Jun 16, 1902 in Moscow, Russia
  • Died: 1965
  • Occupation: Director, Actor, Writer
  • Active: '20s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Shakhmatnaya Goryachka, Neobychainye Priklyucheniya Mistera Vesta v Strane Bolshevikov, Okraina
  • First Major Screen Credit: Neobychainye Priklyucheniya Mistera Vesta v Strane Bolshevikov (1924)

Biography

During his heyday in the late '20s and early '30s, Russian actor and filmmaker Boris Barnet was hailed a master of tragicomic satire. Ironically, it would be his use of satire that would put a permanent damper on what promised to be a long, brilliant career.

Of English heritage, Barnet was still in his teens when he volunteered to serve as a medic for the Red Army during the Russian Civil War. After completing his military service, Barnet attended the Central Military School of Physical Education of Workers. Following a stint as a professional boxer, Barnet enrolled at VGIK and joined Lev Kuleshov's experimental workshop. Following graduation, Barnet co-directed Miss Mend with Fyodor Otsep in 1926. Barnet made his first solo film the following year. Devushka s Korobkoy starred Anna Sten and gently satirized the government's recently enacted New Economic Policy which allowed a limited amount of free enterprise to boost the Russian economy. Like his subsequent successes, the story offered a subtle blending of tragedy and comedy, much in the style popularized by Charlie Chaplin. Barnet's sophomore effort, a historical epic to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the October Revolution, was assigned to him by the studio and was not nearly as successful as his first. Barnet's disinterest in the subject showed and the film failed at the box office. However, he returned to form with his next effort, Dom na Trubnoi/The House on Trubnaya Square (1928). Audiences loved Barnet's comic take on the complicated relationships among Moscow's dwindling bourgeois society, but some critics warned that such satires could be potentially troublesome for unwary filmmakers. It was advice that Barnet did not heed when he made the sad yet funny Okraina (1933), the story of how the Russian Revolution divided a small Russian community. Though well made, the story was ill-timed and the film was heavily criticized for presenting the Russian people in a negative light. While Barnet never made another real satire, the criticism had a cumulative effect on his career and though he received the title of Honored Artist in 1935, he was never able to regain the popularity and approval he had prior to Okraina. He still continued to make films through the early '60s and a few of them, including U Samogo Sinego Morya/The Bluest of Seas (1935) (one of the Soviet Union's first color films), Podvig Razvedchika/Secret Mission (1947), and Annushka (1959), received good reviews. In 1965, Barnet was working on a film in in Riga, Latvia, when he committed suicide. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Boris Barnet

Boris Barnet
Born Boris Vasilyevich Barnet
June 18, 1902(1902-06-18)
Moscow, Russian Empire (now Russia)
Died January 8, 1965 (aged 62)
Riga, Soviet Union (now Latvia)
Occupation Film director, screenwriter
Years active 1927 - 1963
Spouse(s) Natalia Glan (1926-1927)
Yelena Kuzmina (1928-1936)
Valentina Barnet
Alla Kazanskaya

Boris Vasilyevich Barnet (Russian: Борис Васильевич Барнет; 18 June 1902 – 8 January 1965) was a Soviet film director, actor and screenwriter. He directed 27 films between 1927 and 1963.

Contents

Early years

Barnet was born in Moscow. A student of the Moscow Art School, he joined the Red Army at age 16 and was then professionally involved in boxing. In 1927 he shot his first feature, a comedy film, The Girl with the Hatbox, starring Anna Sten. His 1928 melodramatic film The House on Trubnaya, starring Vera Maretskaya, was rediscovered in the mid-1990s and now ranks as one of Russian silent film classics.

Encouraged in his early efforts by Yakov Protazanov, Barnet emerged in the 1930s as one of the country's leading film-makers, working with the likes of Serafima Birman and Nikolai Erdman. Barnet's masterpiece is Okraina (1933), a pacifist story acclaimed at the first Venice Film Festival and spoofed by Pavel Lutsik in his award-winning 1998 remake.

Later years and work

Barnet's postwar work is exemplified by Secret Agent, the first Soviet spy movie. The Stalin Prize-winning film was also years ahead of its time in exhibiting Hitchcockian influence and tricks and helped cement Barnet's reputation abroad.[1]

It was Barnet's gift of artisic invention that made him stand out from the crowd of Soviet colleagues. In a Barnet film, a photograph in the newspaper would unexpectedly come alive, and scenes would often end with a detail introducing the next scene. He would begin a scene with a close up, "so that the space is progressively discovered by changing the axis or by camera movement".[1] Among Russian filmmakers professing their admiration for Barnet was Andrey Tarkovsky.

After some years of artistic silence the alcoholism-prone director committed suicide in Riga, Latvian SSR. He was survived by wife Alla Kazanskaya and daughter Olga Barnet.

Filmography

As director
  • The Girl with the Hat Box (Девушка с коробкой)(1927)
  • Moscow in October (Москва в Октябре) (1927)
  • The House on Trubnaya (Дом на Трубной) (1928)
  • Living Things (Живые дела) (1930)
  • The Ghost (Привидения) (1931)
  • The Thaw (Ледолом) (1931)
  • Okraina (Окраина) (1933)
  • By the Bluest of Seas (У самого синего моря) (1936)
  • A Night in September (Ночь в сентябре) (1939)
  • A Good Lad (Славный малый) (1943)
  • Dark is the Night (Однажды ночью) (1945)
  • Secret Agent (Подвиг разведчика) (1947)
  • Pages of Life (Страницы жизни) (1948)
  • Bountiful Summer Щедрое лето) (1950)
  • Lyana (Ляна) (1955)
  • The Poet (Поэт) (1956)
  • The Wrestler and the Clown (Борец и клоун) (1957)
  • The Old Horseman (Старый наездник) (1959)
  • Annushka (Аннушка) (1959)
  • Alyonka (Алёнка) (1961)
  • Whistle Stop (Полустанок) (1963)
As actor

References

  1. ^ a b Richard Taylor, Ian Christie. Inside the Film Factory: New Approaches to Russian and Soviet Cinema. Routledge, 1991. Page 158.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Odnazhdy Nochyu (1944 War Film)
Dom na Trubnoi (1928 Comedy Film)
Podvig Razvedchika (1947 War Film)

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