Donskoi, Mark
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
DONSKOI, Mark
Nationality: Russian. Born: Mark Semyonovich Donskoi in Odessa, 6 March 1901. Education: Studied medicine and music, then law at University of Simferopol, to 1925; State Film School, under Eisenstein, 1926. Military Service: Served in Red Army during civil war, 1919–21. Family: Married scriptwriter Irina Sprink, 1936, two sons. Career: Worked in Ukrainian police force, early 1920s; after film school, joined Belgoskino studios, Leningrad, and directed first film, Zhizn, 1927; directed first sound film for Vostokkino, 1934; began at Soyuzdietfilm (Children's Film Studios), Moscow, 1940; worked at Kiev Studios, 1942–45; returned to Soyuzdietfilm (renamed Maxim Gorky Studios), 1946; assigned to Kiev Studios, 1949; returned to Gorky Studios, Moscow, late 1950s. Awards: Stalin Prize, 1941, 1946, 1948; Order of Lenin, 1944, 1971; Silver Seal, Locarno Festival, 1960; People's Artist of the Soviet Union, 1966; Hero of Socialist Labor, 1971. Died: 24 March 1981.
Films as Director:
- 1927
Zhizn (Life ) (co-d, co-sc); V bolshom gorode (In the Big City ) (co-d, co-sc)
- 1928
Tsena cheloveka (The Price of Man ; Man's Value ; The Lesson ) (co-d)
- 1929
Pizhon (The Fop )
- 1930
Chuzoi bereg (The Other Shore ); Ogon (Fire )
- 1934
Pesnya o shchastye (Song about Happiness ) (co-d)
- 1938
Detstvo Gorkovo (Childhood of Gorky ; The Childhood of Maxim Gorki ) (+ co-sc)
- 1939
Vlyudyakh (Among People ; My Apprenticeship ; Out in the World ) (+ co-sc)
- 1940
Moi universiteti (My Universities ) (+ co-sc)
- 1941
Romantiki (Children of the Soviet Arctic ) (+ co-sc)
- 1942
Kak zakalyalas stal (How the Steel Was Tempered ; Heroes Are Made ) (+ sc); "Mayak (Beacon, The Signal Tower)" (d only), "Kvartal (Block 14)" (+ spvr), "Sinie skali (Blue Crags)" (+ spvr) segments of Boevi kinosbornik (Fighting Film Album ) no. 9
- 1944
Raduga (The Rainbow ) (+ co-sc)
- 1945
Nepokorenniye (Semya tarassa ; Unvanquished ; Unconquered ) (+ co-sc)
- 1947
Selskaya uchitelnitsa (Varvara ; An Emotional Education ; Rural Institute ; A Village School-Teacher )
- 1949
Alitet ukhodit v gory (Zakoni Bolshoi zemli ; Alitet Leaves for the Hills ) (+ co-sc) (film banned, partially destroyed)
- 1950
Sportivnaya slava (Nachi chempiony ; Sporting Fame ; Our Champions ) (short)
- 1956
Mat (Mother ) (+ co-sc)
- 1957
Dorogoi tsenoi (At Great Cost ; The Horse That Cried )
- 1959
Foma Gordeyev (+ co-sc)
- 1962
Zdravstvuitye deti (Hello Children ) (+ co-sc)
- 1966
Serdtse materi (A Mother's Heart )
- 1967
Vernost materi (A Mother's Loyalty )
- 1972
Chaliapin
- 1973
Nadezhda
Other Films:
- 1926
Prostitutka (The Prostitute ) (Frelikh) (role as passerby)
- 1927
Yevo prevosoditelstvo (His Excellency ) (Roshal) (ed)
- 1935
Nevidimi chelovek (The Invisible Man ) (Whale) (spvr of dubbing and reediting)
- 1940
Brat geroya (Brother of a Hero ) (Vasilchikov) (art d)
Publications
By DONSKOI: articles—
"Ceux qui savent parler aux dieux . . . ," in Cinéma (Paris), November 1959.
"Mon Idéal c'est un humanisme combattant," in Les Lettres Françaises (Paris), 19 December 1963.
Interview with Robert Grelier, in Cinéma (Paris), December 1967.
"My—propagandisty partii," in Iskusstvo Kino (Moscow), November 1972.
"Tret'e izmerenie," in Iskusstvo Kino (Moscow), December 1974.
On DONSKOI: books—
Leyda, Jay, Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film, London, 1960.
Cervoni, Albert, Marc Donskoi, Paris, 1966.
Liehm, Mira and Antonin, The Most Important Art: Eastern European Film after 1945, Berkeley, California, 1977.
On DONSKOI: articles—
de la Roche, Catherine, "Mark Donskoi," in Sequence (London), Autumn 1948.
Fox, Charles, "The Gorki Trilogy—The Poetry of Cinema," in Film (London), February 1955.
Marcorelles, Louis, in Cahiers du Cinéma (Paris), no. 93, 1959.
Haudiquet, Philippe, "Mark Donskoi," in Image et Son (Paris), November 1964.
Gillett, John, "Mark Donskoi," in Focus on Film (London), March/April 1970.
"Director of the Year," in International Film Guide, London, 1971.
"Mark Donskoi," in Film Dope (London), June 1977.
Fadeeva, Y., "Mark Donskoi: Irrepressible Youth," in Soviet Film (Moscow), no. 3, 1979.
"Mark Donskoi," in Avant-Scène du Cinéma (Paris), 15 February 1979.
Zak, M., and others, "V kontekste istorii," in Iskusstvo Kino (Moscow), March 1981.
Cluny, C.M., "Hommage: Marc Donskoi," in Cinéma (Paris), May 1981.
Pokrovskii, V., and others, "Tiazhko, tovarishchi!," in Iskusstvo Kino (Moscow), no. 5, 1990.
* * *
Mark Donskoi may not be as familiar to Western audiences as Eisenstein, Pudovkin, or Dovzhenko; his films are in no way as readily recalled as Battleship Potemkin, Mother, or Earth. Like other Soviet filmmakers, he propagandizes about the glories of the Bolshevik Revolution and highlights the life of Lenin. But Donskoi's great and unique contribution to Russian cinema is his adaption to the screen of Maxim Gorki's autobiographical trilogy: The Childhood of Gorki, My Apprenticeship, and My Universities, all based on the early life of the famed writer and shot during the late 1930s. (Years later, Donskoi adapted two other Gorki works, Mother —the same story filmed by Pudovkin in 1926—and Foma Gordeyev. )
In the trilogy, Donskoi chronicles the life of Gorki from childhood on, focusing on the experiences which alter his view of the world. At their best, these films are original and pleasing: the first presents a comprehensive and richly detailed view of rural life in Russia during the 1870s. While delineating the dreams of nineteenth-century Russian youth, Donskoi lovingly recreates the era. The characters are presented in terms of their conventional ambitions and relationships within the family structure. They are not revolutionaries, but rather farmers and other provincials with plump bodies and commonplace faces. The result is a very special sense of familiarity, of fidelity to a time and place. Of course, villains in Gorki's childhood are not innately evil, but products of a repressive czarist society. They are thus compassionately viewed. Donskoi pictures the Russian countryside with imagination, and sometimes even with grandeur.
Donskoi's later noteworthy works include How the Steel Was Tempered, one of the first Russian films to deal with World War II. While based on a Civil War story, the filmmaker includes only the sequences pertaining to Ukrainian resistance to German invaders in 1918, paralleling that situation to the Nazi invasion. The story also recalls the Gorki trilogy in its presentation of a boy who is changed by his encounter with life's challenges.
The Rainbow, an appropriately angry drama shot at the height of World War II, details the struggles of life in a German-occupied village. Donskoi's message in this film is that despite Nazi brutality, including the shooting of small boys, the spirit of the Soviet people will endure. This film is particularly inspirational; its approach may even have influenced Italian neorealism. The Unvanquished, about occupied Kiev, is a kind of sequel to The Rainbow. It graphically depicts the slaughter of Jews at Babi Yar.
The careers of few Russian filmmakers have outlasted that of Donskoi, who in his youth had fought in the Civil War and been imprisoned by the White Russians. His films span fifty years, though his Gorki trilogy alone would have assured him of a niche in cinema history.
—Rob Edelman
Find more facts and information related to the .
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
The Celluloid Drom: Romani Images in Russian Cinema
; ...Yevgeni Shneider, USSR, 1936), Dorogoi tsenoi /At Great Cost (Mark Donskoi, USSR, 1957), Lautary (Emil Loteanu, USSR, 1972), Tabor ukhodit...years after Stalin's death (1953), in 1957, when director Mark Donskoi was able to make Dorogoi tsenoi / At a Great Cost. The story...
Read more
|
|
Into the outlands
; ...from the Soviet era: During WW II, the national film industry decentralized to outlying "film factories" in the southeast (Mark Donskoi spent the war making films in Turkmenistan, and both Eisenstein and Vertov transferred to Kazakhstan), and during the Khrushchev...
Read more
|
|
Common Folk: The Films of Ousmene Sembene.(Critical Essay)
; ...of feathers and tom-toms, he said.' So he went to Moscow, where he studied at the Gorki Institute under Soviet directors Mark Donskoi and Sergei Gerasimov. This was the time when the U.S.S.R. was not only offering an economic alternative to developing countries...
Read more
|
|
Taslima's pilgrimage.(Meyebela, My Bengali Girlhood: A Memoir of Growing up Female in a Muslim World)(Book Review)
; ...what does this book remind me of? Then I realized: In reading Maxim Gorky's My Childhood, or watching the movie version by Mark Donskoi, one experiences the same violence, the same illiteracy and emotional underdevelopment, the same brutality toward children...
Read more
|
|
Autobiography and the autobiographical in the Bill Douglas Trilogy.
; ...a central character from boyhood to manhood: Truffaut's Antoine Doinel series, Satyajit Ray's Apu Trilogy, and the three Mark Donskoi films based on Maxim Gorky's autobiography are probably the most obvious examples. However, the gap between the director...
Read more
|
|
Domesticated Violence
; ...illiterate population of his native Senegal by means of a written art form, he studied film in Moscow with Sergei Gerasimov and Mark Donskoi from 1961 to 1962, then began to work in this (for him) new medium shortly thereafter. Sembne's films are not innovative...
Read more
|
|
Jewish themes in Stalinist films
; ...that films of the 1930s were without interest: the audiences watched with pleasure the works of Boris Barnet, the films of Mark Donskoi, made from Maxim Gorkii's autobiography, and above all, the most popular Soviet film, Chapaev, by Grigorii and Sergei Vasilev...
Read more
|
|
Obituary: Zoltan Fabri
; ...Vary Film Festival. This film was praised for its psychological insight and skilful technical solutions by such directors as Mark Donskoi and Alberto Cavalcanti. The next film shot by Fabri, Korhinta ("Merry-Go-Round", 1955), was called by the critic Istvan Nemeskurty...
Read more
|
|
Screen test
; ...Krzysztof Zanussi f. Julien Duvivier g Fritz Lang h. Louis Feuillade 15. What directors studied under these directors? a. Mark Donskoi b. Lev Kuleshov c. Milos Forman d. Werner Herzog e. Nicholas Ray f. Martin Scorsese Secrets & Lies 16. What was digitally...
Read more
|
For more facts and information,
see all related premium articles
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Sembene, Ousmane
...published first novel, Le Docker noir , 1956; returned to Senegal, 1960; studied cinema in Moscow under Sergei Gerasimov and Mark Donskoi, 1962; made first film, L'Empire Sonrai , 1963; founding editor, Kaddu newspaper, 1972. Awards: Dakar Festival of Negro...
Read more
|
|
Yeelen
...full-length feature to have been directed by Souleymane Ciss é , who studied at the VGIK film school in Moscow under Mark Donskoi. Den Muso (1975) was the first feature to be shot in Mali in the Bambara tongue and concerned the plight of child-mothers...
Read more
|