Cain and Artem

7.0
  • Genre: Drama
  • Run time: 85 min
  • Premiere: 1930. June 6.

Pavel Petrov-Bytov was an enfant terrible of the highbrow Leningrad Sovkino film factory. He was notorious for his article “We Have No Soviet Filmmaking,” in which he criticized all the achievements of the Soviet avant-garde. In spite of his beliefs and his scandalous struggle with “bourgeois” and “formalist” filmmaking, Petrov-Bytov directed an aesthetically refined work, shot entirely on set with masterful chiaroscuro lighting: a perfect example of “Soviet expressionism.” Based on a Maxim Gorky story, the plot of Cain and Artem provides a wake-up call to the Russian people to overcome alcoholism and religious factionalism, as it spotlights the (many) drunken denizens of a typical village and their disregard for the Jewish shoemaker Cain.

Discover

Emil Gal

Cain

Yelena Yegorova

Woman in the Market Place

Georgiy Uvarov

Husband of Woman in the Market Place

Art

Isaak Makhlis

Production Design

Camera

Nikolai Ushakov

Director of Photography

Directing

Writing

Maxim Gorky

Short Story

Art

Isaak Makhlis

Production Design

Camera

Nikolai Ushakov

Director of Photography

Directing

Writing

Maxim Gorky

Short Story