IMDb RATING
7.6/10
8.8K
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A group of oppressed factory workers go on strike in pre-revolutionary Russia.A group of oppressed factory workers go on strike in pre-revolutionary Russia.A group of oppressed factory workers go on strike in pre-revolutionary Russia.
Leonid Alekseev
- Factory Sleuth
- (uncredited)
Daniil Antonovich
- Worker
- (uncredited)
Pyotr Malek
- Police Spy
- (uncredited)
Misha Mamin
- Baby Boy
- (uncredited)
Pavel Poltoratskiy
- Stockholder
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaStrike (Russian: Stachka (1925)) is a Soviet silent propaganda film edited and directed by Sergei Eisenstein. Originating as one entry out of a proposed seven-part series titled "Towards Dictatorship of the Proletariat," Strike was a joint collaboration between the Proletcult Theatre and the film studio Goskino. As Eisenstein's first full-length feature film, it marked his transition from theatre to cinema, and his next film Bronenosets Potyomkin (1925) (Russian: Bronenosets Potyomkin) emerged from the same film cycle.
- GoofsThe story is set in 1903. Throughout the film, automobiles from the 1920s appear on streets. One is the 1920s auto that the worker (who stole the administrators' posted reply to workers' demands) tried to use to escape police goons during a nighttime rainstorm. When upper-class women appear, they are wearing contemporary 1920s fashions, and the popular music that's on the sound track is also from the 1920s.
- Quotes
Title Card: At the factory, all is calm. BUT. The boys are restless.
- Alternate versionsThe film was restored at Gorky Film Studio in 1969.
- ConnectionsEdited into Ten Days That Shook the World (1967)
Featured review
Sergei Eisenstein's "Strike", like his more well-known films, is interesting and contains some memorable imagery. The story is worthwhile in itself, and it repays careful attention because of the considerable detail that is shown using Eisenstein's distinctive approach. It lacks any particularly interesting characters, but then, so did "Battleship Potemkin". Only an occasional lack of polish sets this apart from Eisenstein's later films.
The story starts with the situations that provoke the strike, and then follows developments on both sides of the dispute. It becomes surprisingly involved for what seems at first to be a simple confrontation. There is quite an assortment of situations, settings, and characters. On occasion, the images are overdone, occasionally even off-putting, but you can already see the creative use of imagery that Eisenstein would later use so effectively.
"Strike" will probably be of interest mainly to those who already appreciate Eisenstein's films, but it is worth seeing. It is really only a cut below "Potemkin", which itself, though generally the most-praised of his films, might actually be surpassed by some of his later works. In any case, "Strike" displays the same kind of style, and has several of the characteristics of the fine classics that were to come.
The story starts with the situations that provoke the strike, and then follows developments on both sides of the dispute. It becomes surprisingly involved for what seems at first to be a simple confrontation. There is quite an assortment of situations, settings, and characters. On occasion, the images are overdone, occasionally even off-putting, but you can already see the creative use of imagery that Eisenstein would later use so effectively.
"Strike" will probably be of interest mainly to those who already appreciate Eisenstein's films, but it is worth seeing. It is really only a cut below "Potemkin", which itself, though generally the most-praised of his films, might actually be surpassed by some of his later works. In any case, "Strike" displays the same kind of style, and has several of the characteristics of the fine classics that were to come.
- Snow Leopard
- Sep 1, 2004
- Permalink
- How long is Strike?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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