Film Screening: ALIM (1926)

A date for your diaries at the start of next term: 18:00 Friday 29 April 2022, Birkbeck Cinema:

BIMI presents a screening of Alim (1926) with an introduction by Olena Palko

A newly restored silent film from 1926 featuring original music by the Crimean Tatar folk and jazz guitarist Enver Izmaylov.

Introduction: Dr Olena Palko (History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck)

BOOK HERE: https://www.bbk.ac.uk/events/remote_event_view?id=29930

Alim (Georgi Tasin, Ukraine/USSR, 1926, 61 min.) is an adventure film reminiscent of an American western. It is based on a Crimean Tatar legend, turned into a play by the repressed Crimean Tatar writer Ipchi Ümer and adapted for screen by a famous Soviet Ukrainian writer Mykola Bazhan. It tells a story of a nineteenth-century Crimean Tatar Robin Hood, Alim, fighting against rich people.

The shooting of the film began in the autumn of 1925 in line with the Soviet indigenisation (korenizatsiia) policy, which called for more cultural products with national plots. It was produced by the famous All-Ukrainian Photo Cinema Administration (VUFKU), widely known as ‘Ukrainian Hollywood’, a film studio which during 1922-1930 released over 140 films, among which are Dziga Vertov’s Man with a Movie Camera (1929) and Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s Earth (1930).

The film gained popularity abroad and was presented in Berlin and Paris. Nonetheless, in 1937 the film was banned with all copies destroyed. The premier of the restored film took place in 2014 as a commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the deportation of Crimean Tatars.

This screening is a rare opportunity to discover a little-known example of the Soviet Ukrainian cinematic avant-garde, previously unknown to the western audience.

Set in Crimea, which remains occupied by Russia since 2014, this film will draw attention to the plight of Crimean Tatar and Ukrainian people amidst the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Published by sgmhbasees

The BASEES Study Group for Minority History (SGMH) is a forum devoted to the study of minority groups in the national and regional histories of Central, Eastern and Southeastern European from the Napoleonic Wars to the contemporary past.

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