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A megalopolis of more than twelve million inhabitants, Moscow is a city with a rich and varied history. In 1918, following the Revolution, Moscow became the capital of the Soviet Union, and it remained capital of the Russian Federation after 1991. Moscow’s status as capital, from 1918 to the present, more or less coincides with its life on the silver screen, since there are very few preserved filmic depictions of the city from pre-Revolutionary years. In the Soviet era, film often served propaganda purposes; therefore, the image of Moscow on celluloid echoes the political ambitions of the country, and film locations and settings reflect the cultural agenda of the times. World Film Locations: Moscow compares and contrasts images from the past and present, giving the forty-six carefully selected scene reviews and seven spotlight essays a historical focus. With an inside look at the city’s film studio, Mosfilm, the book is essential for all armchair travellers and cinephiles alike.
Birgit Beumers is a reader in the Russian Department at Bristol University.
Maps/Scenes Scenes 1–6 – 1924–1928Scenes 7–13 – 1934–1946Scenes 14–19 – 1957–1966Scenes 20–26 – 1967–1980Scenes 27–32 – 1986–1992Scenes 33–39 – 1992–2000Scenes 40–46 – 2004–2012 EssaysMoscow: City of the Imagination – Birgit BeumersCinematic Journeys on the Moscow Metro – Birgit BeumersPalace of Soviets – Vincent BohlingerSites of Production and Demonstration – Birgit BeumersUrban Poetics: Moscow in 1960s Films – Sergey DobryninHousing Estates: Cheremushki on Screen – Sergey DobryninMarginal or Central: Prostitution in Moscow – Emily Schuckman Matthews