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Word: eisensteins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

What greater contrast could there be to Bicycle Thief than Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible, Part I? Semi mythical, heavily "artistic," and at several steps removed from experience, Ivan (1945) appeals to the eye almost exclusively. The most useful analogy for describing this film is that of grand opera. Just as opera subordinates everything to music, Eisenstein suspends verisimilitude and dramatic intensity to give full play to the carefully arranged, visual sequences of this opera of design...

Author: By Raymond A. Soxolov jr., | Title: The Bicycle Thief and Ivan, Part I | 1/8/1962 | See Source »

...doubt about it now: Japan's Akira Kurosawa must be numbered with Sergei Eisenstein and D. W. Griffith among the supreme creators of cinema. Rashomon (1952) introduced him to U.S. audiences as a powerful ironist. The Magnificent Seven (1956) demonstrated his mastery of movies as pure movement. Ikiru (1960), one of the screen's great spiritual documents, revealed him as a moralist both passionate and profound. Throne of Blood, a resetting of Macbeth among the clanking thanes and brutish politics of 16th century Japan, is a visual descent into the hell of greed and superstition, into the gibbering...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Kurosawa's Macbeth | 12/1/1961 | See Source »

...Radcliffe Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa will initiate 11 new members at 9 a.m. this morning in Agassix. They are Rosemary Faulkner, Mai B. Milk, Hester Eisenstein, Victoria Spurgeon, Myra Lakoff, Anne B. Thompson, Mrs. Pamela Myrick Staley Herr, Sarah Fuller, Nancy Decker, Sara Sweezy, and Mary Rhinelander Morgan...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Radcliffe PBK | 6/14/1961 | See Source »

...local Eisenstein behind these antics, which include a brilliant parody of the Dance of Death scene from Bergman's "Seventh Seal," is Paul Morgan, a senior, who started it all in January with an idea and a $50 shoestring...

Author: By Mark L. Krupnick, | Title: Eliotic Cinemantics | 4/29/1961 | See Source »

...just a big, slick, commercial horse opera. The film, to be sure, is meticulously produced, directed, acted and "dited, and it is often startlingly beautiful to see-there is a sequence, photographed in Death Valley, that rivals in pure malign geology the finest frames of Sergei Eisenstein's Thunder over Mexico. Nevertheless, many spectators will wish that a little less of the beauty had been created by God and a little more by Brando, and others may realize that, if it were less pretentious. Jacks would be easier to recognize as. on the whole, a dang good shoot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The $6,000,000 Method | 3/24/1961 | See Source »

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