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Sochi 2003
Western Under the Red Banner
by Rashmi Doraiswamy
First
there was the western. Then there was the spaghetti western. But few know
that there was also the socialist western. The magic of the genre
extended to many of the countries of the erstwhile socialist bloc. According
to Sergei Lavrentiev, Programme Director of the festival, the western
spread from West Germany to East Germany and from there on to the other
socialist states and was very popular from the sixties to the eighties.
Films like 'Lemonade Joe' (Oldrich Lipsky / Czechoslovakia /1964), a pastiche
of the western, according to him, were hits in the USA as well.
The action in the films takes place in the USA or in the
countries where they were made. 'The Prairie' (France-Romania / Pierre-Gaspard
Huit / 1968), 'Chingachgook – The Big Snake' (East Germany / Richard
Groschopp / 1967), 'White Wolves' (East Germany – Yugoslavia / Konrad
Petsold / 1969), 'Old Surehand' (East Germany-Yugoslavia / Alfred Vohrer
/ 1965) were some of the films in which the plots are set in the USA.
It is also interesting that the character of Chingachgook, the trustworthy
Indian, who plays the second fiddle to the white man, is repeated in several
films (in this festival, 'The Big Snake' from East Germany and 'The Prairie'
from France-Romania). The socialist western differs from many of the early
Hollywood westerns in its attitude towards the Indians: they are not represented
as backward and antagonistic. The narrative drive of the plot centres
rather around group rivalries.
The
Soviet films, on the other hand, mostly refer to the period of the Civil
War or the period immediately after the Civil War. 'Seventh Bullet' (Ali
Khamraev / 1972) , 'Red Poppies of Issyk-Kul' (Bolotbek Shamsiev / 1971),
'In Search of the Wind' (Vladimir Lyubomudrov / 1978), 'The Sixth' (Samvel
Gasparov 1981) and 'At Home Among Strangers' (Nikita Mikhalkov / 1974)
were some of the films in this category. The thematic element of the stretching
of the ‘frontier’, central to the Hollywood western is thus
retained but transformed to include the encounter of socialism with feudal
and ‘backward’ social elements and formations. Many of these
films were set and shot in Central Asia.
What immediately identifies these films as westerns despite
thematic differences are the topographical elements: the wide open spaces,
the men on horses, the typical dress code, the city facades that include
pubs, heroism, macho violence, and male bonding, often between the white
man and the ‘coloured’ man - the Indian or the Central Asian.
And for those who believe that the western is an all-male
genre, there was also 'A Man From Boulevard Capucines' by Alla Surikova
(USSR / 1987), on Mr First who brings the first slapstick films to a town
turning its cowboys to new leaves!
Rashmi Doraiswamy
© FIPRESCI 2003
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