the distracted gaze
by Douglas Messerli
Nina Agadzhanova (screenplay),
Sergei M. Eisenstein (director) Bronenosets
Potemkin (Battleship Potemkin) /
1925
It has been decades since I first
saw Sergei Eisenstein’s renowned film Battleship
Potemkin, and I now no longer even remember what my childhood impressions
of film might have been. But watching it again yesterday, I was struck my
certain elements of the film that, surely given the years of commentary on this
1925 work, has been described before; but since I have not read any such
commentary, I thought I might at least proffer my own (perhaps unoriginal)
perceptions.
Skeptical of his prognosis, many of the sailors refuse to eat the soup served up for their dinner, relying instead on fish they have caught from the boat and canned rations bought from the ship’s commissary. Eisenstein brilliantly reveals the significance of this seemingly small act by centering his camera on the swaying tables, unattended by human presence, the fact of which infuriates the Chief Officer Giliaroysky (Grigori Aleksandrov). Soon after, the men are called to the top deck where the ship’s Commander Golikov (Vladimir Barsky) demands that those who did not enjoy
Yet Vakulinchuk’s direct confrontation with his opponents and the last scene of the film are exceptions in Eisenstein’s work. The Bolshevik’s appeal for reason and empathy, for the brotherly-love represented by the revolutionary song “The Internationale,” stands against the actions of the much of the rest of the work. Soon after, the sailors mutiny, sending most of the ship’s officers overboard into the depths of the sea, and at the very moment they perceive that their actions have succeeded Vakulinchuk is killed by Giliaroysky.
One might even describe Eisenstein’s central imaging device is to pose
his figures in a way that they look toward what photographic critic Murat
Nemet-Nejat has described as the “peripheral space” of photography. Whether he
films his figures singularly, in twos, or in threes, they seem to be unable to
engage in a communal sharing of language with either their perceived opponents
or even with themselves, as they sometimes look off in different directions
toward the edges of what Eisenstein presents as a frame. Even when they are
presented as facing straight-forward they appear to be less responding to their
interlocutors than to us, the hopefully sympathetic viewers (and would-be
evaluators) of their actions. Despite the quick cross-cutting of officer and
sailors in scenes representing their arguments about the quality of their meat
or the far more important show-down between accusation and rejection on the
deck of the ship, any real communication is clearly revealed, by the director’s
isolated images of the distracted gaze of sailors, to be out of the realm of
possibility.
With eyes shifting to the left, right, and down of the film’s frames, the sailors of Battleship Potemkin stare off into spaces that permit no human interrelationships.
Even more dramatically, the famed slaughter of innocents on the now
revered Potemkin Steps (named for the film, despite the fact that in real life
the murders of Oddessians occurred mostly on the surrounding side streets) is
played out from several odd perspectives. First, we witness the crowds moving
down the steps en masse, but each locked into their separate race with
terror.
These individual acts of entreaty, however, have absolutely no effect,
as one by one those who implore for the cessation of the soldier’s act are shot
dead. The soldiers no longer represent human beings but some horrific machine
that has no comprehension of its brutal acts. As Cassock troops suddenly appear
at the very front of the steps to further beat and maim the fleeing masses,
Eisenstein’s camera moves now behind the citizens, watching from their backs as
a child, captured in its carriage, careens out of its dead mother’s arms down
the blood-stained steps.
We now observe the actions not from the viewpoint of the Odessa citizens
but from the automaton-like troops marching behind them, returning us to the
world of the distracted gaze of beings who refuse to face one another in open
communication. The result of this inhuman situation is so horrifying that, when
the ship reacts to the slaughter of innocents by shooting into the city’s grand
opera house, even the sculpted lions surrounding its entrance appear to rise up
in absolute outrage.
The refusal of the other ships to fire is greeted with cheers by the
mutinous sailors, who have won the day if not the battle. The actual story is
far more complex, and, alas, far more similar to events that happened in the
central portions of this film. Ultimately, the Battleship Potemkin, after
wandering for some period of time, was surrendered to the Romanians.
Los Angeles, July 25, 2014
Reprinted from International Cinema Review (July 2014).
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