SOVYET ANİMASYON FİLMLERİNDE ÜSLUP VE TEMA
ON THE TOPICS AND STYLE OF SOVIET ANIMATED FILMS
Author(s): Yasemin Kilinçarslan, Ülo PikkovSubject(s): Film / Cinema / Cinematography, Sociology of Art
Published by: Sanat ve Dil Araştırmaları Enstitüsü
Keywords: Disney; cartoon; Socialist Realism; animation; cinema;
Summary/Abstract: This article provides a survey of Soviet animation and analyses the thematic and stylistic course of its development. Soviet animated film emerged and materialised in synch with the fluctuations of the region’s political climate and was directly shaped by it. A number of trends and currents of Soviet animation also pertain to other Eastern European countries. After all, Eastern Europe constituted an integrated cultural space that functioned as a single market for the films produced across it by filmmakers who interacted in a professional regional network of film education, events, festivals, publications etc. Initially experimental, post-revolutionary Russian animation soon fell under the sway of the Socialist Realist discourse, along with the rest of Soviet art, and quickly crystallised as a didactic genre for children. Disney’s paradigm became its major source of inspiration both in terms of visual style and thematic scope, despite the fact that Soviet Union was regarded as the ideological opposite of the Western way of life and mindset. The Soviet animation industry was spread across different studios and republics that adopted slightly varied production practices and tolerated different degrees of artistic freedom. Studios in the smaller republics, such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in particular, stood out for making films that were more ideologically complicated than those produced in Moscow.
Journal: Ulakbilge Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi
- Issue Year: 6/2018
- Issue No: 31
- Page Range: 1764-1785
- Page Count: 22
- Language: Turkish