@inbook{ca45be7a00f14cfbbff35b952fad083c,
title = "Special/spatial effects in Soviet cinema",
abstract = "In this chapter I analyze the techniques that have allowed filmmakers to create images of movement in to other spaces, of (space) flight, and of imagined life on other planets, and thus develop an aestheticized image of the cosmos. I focus on the technical achievements of the Soviet film industry—sometimes superior to Hollywood—when creating films about space and other planets. Through the case of Pavel Klushantsev I investigate Soviet images of space as projections of a utopian, socialist society, and the use of special effects to simulate the conquest of other planets, by means of which the Soviet Union sought to assert its superiority over both American space and American film industries. Once the Americans had landed on the moon, the Soviet film industry lost interest in creating uplifting visions of utopian planets and societies. Instead, special effects moved into the realm of art-house cinema in the 1970s, before making a return into mainstream in the 2000s. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the potential for the manipulation of images for political purposes, as exposed and parodied in a mockumentary about an invented mythical journey into space, Aleksei Fedorchenko{\textquoteright}s First on the Moon. ",
author = "Birgit Beumers",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781138951983",
series = "Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
pages = "169--188",
editor = "Vlad Strukov and Helena Goscilo",
booktitle = "Russian Aviation, Space Flight and Visual Culture",
address = "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland",
}