23.11.2012 Views

Part one of Passport's guide to Moscow's favorite - Passport magazine

Part one of Passport's guide to Moscow's favorite - Passport magazine

Part one of Passport's guide to Moscow's favorite - Passport magazine

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

1980s, the club originally had its sessions<br />

at the cinema museum, which<br />

has since closed down. The title <strong>of</strong> a<br />

Samizdat film <strong>magazine</strong> edited by Igor<br />

Aleinikov back in the mid-1980s was<br />

used as the club’s name.<br />

In 2004, CINE FANTOM moved <strong>to</strong> the<br />

Fitil cinema near Park Kultury metro station<br />

where films are screened every<br />

Wednesday at 8pm. At the same time, the<br />

club acquired a newspaper and a more informative<br />

web site. The selection <strong>of</strong> movies<br />

for screening has also evolved, but so<br />

has the country’s entire film industry.<br />

“With moving <strong>to</strong> Fitil, the club certainly<br />

improved,” Aleinikov says.<br />

“When we were at the cinema museum,<br />

we didn’t have our own publication,<br />

just leaflets, and our website was<br />

not as comprehensive as it is now. As<br />

for the content <strong>of</strong> our screening, we<br />

Gleb Aleinikov<br />

at a pressconference<br />

in<br />

Rotterdam<br />

depend on what is going on in the<br />

film industry, and this is something we<br />

don’t have any control <strong>of</strong>.”<br />

“The times change and so does what<br />

we are screening,” adds Selivestrov.<br />

“Back in 1995, Russian cinema hardly<br />

existed at all, and what did exist, was<br />

marginal. These days, on the contrary,<br />

we have a huge amount <strong>of</strong> films, a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

which is quite interesting.”<br />

And although the club’s focus is primarily<br />

on domestic cinema, foreign<br />

films also make it <strong>to</strong> its screenings. “We<br />

pay a lot <strong>of</strong> interest <strong>to</strong> programs <strong>of</strong> foreign<br />

films, as well,” says Aleinikov. “It is<br />

important <strong>to</strong> know the international<br />

context <strong>to</strong> be able <strong>to</strong> see in what way<br />

domestic cinema relates <strong>to</strong> it.”<br />

At the same time, the club has taken part<br />

in several foreign festivals, presenting programs<br />

<strong>of</strong> Russian underground cinema.<br />

The list <strong>of</strong> direc<strong>to</strong>rs whose movies<br />

were screened at CINE FANTOM is quite<br />

diverse, from emerging direc<strong>to</strong>rs like Ilya<br />

Khrzhanovsky and Alexei German Jr. <strong>to</strong><br />

underground cinema producer Yevgeny<br />

Yufit, from internationally recognized art<br />

cinema direc<strong>to</strong>r Alexander Sokurov <strong>to</strong><br />

Troma Films’ founder Lloyd Kaufman.<br />

The founders <strong>of</strong> CINE FANTOM stress<br />

that they are not focused entirely on underground<br />

or non-commercial cinema<br />

and rather aim <strong>to</strong> encompass various areas<br />

<strong>of</strong> contemporary Russian and international<br />

film. For instance, Russia’s most expensive<br />

movie <strong>to</strong> date, Obitayemy Ostrov (The<br />

Inhabited Island) by Fyodor Bondarchuk,<br />

was screened at CINE FANTOM, presented<br />

by its producer Alexander Rodnyansky.<br />

“Over the years, the club has gained a reputation<br />

in the industry, and it’s not a problem<br />

for us <strong>to</strong> invite, for instance, producers<br />

like Rodnyansky or [Sergei] Selyanov and<br />

their films,” Aleinikov says. “And they are<br />

also interested in their films being screened<br />

and discussed at CINE FANTOM because<br />

they get unbiased opinions this way.”<br />

“Our approach is <strong>to</strong>tally universal,”<br />

says Selivestrov. “We don’t make a division<br />

between commercial and noncommercial<br />

cinema, but love both.”<br />

CINE FANTOM, is strictly nonpr<strong>of</strong>it.<br />

“From the very outset, we stated it clearly<br />

that the club is not meant <strong>to</strong> make m<strong>one</strong>y<br />

but <strong>to</strong> spend it,” explains Selivestrov. “We<br />

have a board <strong>of</strong> founders which invests<br />

m<strong>one</strong>y in<strong>to</strong> the development <strong>of</strong> the club.”<br />

Cinema<br />

In recent years, CINE FANTOM’s activities<br />

have diversified quite substantially.<br />

The club is participating in the Moscow<br />

International Film Festival with the program<br />

Alternativa (Alternative), which<br />

features films that would normally have<br />

remained outside <strong>of</strong> the domestic filmmaking<br />

process. For instance, this year’s<br />

Alternativa featured films made by St. Petersburg<br />

based rock band NOM, which<br />

have been popular with the band’s fans<br />

but were never really introduced <strong>to</strong> larger<br />

audiences interested in cinema.<br />

Another direction, in which CINE FAN-<br />

TOM has recently been active in, is the<br />

organization <strong>of</strong> pitching sessions that<br />

allow filmmakers <strong>to</strong> present projects<br />

they are working on or intend <strong>to</strong>, in a<br />

bid <strong>to</strong> find funding or other kind <strong>of</strong> support.<br />

“We held two pitching sessions<br />

within the Moscow International Film<br />

Festival and figured out that they were<br />

Boris Yuhananov and Alexander Dulerayn<br />

during the “Esfir” film discussion<br />

at Cinefan<strong>to</strong>m club<br />

interesting both on the commercial and<br />

creative side,” says Selivestrov. “In a way,<br />

this is some kind <strong>of</strong> a show: people talking<br />

about films they would like <strong>to</strong> make,<br />

and that’s interesting as well.”<br />

“This is something new in this country<br />

and we are glad that we were<br />

among the first <strong>to</strong> introduce this practice<br />

here,” Selivestrov adds. “There are<br />

others who are doing that and we also<br />

plan <strong>to</strong> continue.”<br />

And, ultimately, CINE FANTOM is<br />

launching its own film production. Its<br />

first movie, Mozg (Brain), directed by Selivestrov,<br />

is <strong>to</strong> be released within the next<br />

few months, while the founders say they<br />

are planning <strong>to</strong> launch a few more movies<br />

next year. P<br />

July 2009<br />

19

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!