Lev Kuleshov

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1899-01-13

Deathday 1970-03-29 (71 years old)

Place of Birth Tambov, Russian Empire [now Russia]

Also Known As Lev Vladimirovich Kuleshov, Л. Кулешов

Lev Kuleshov

Biography

Lev Vladimirovich Kuleshov was a Russian and Soviet filmmaker and film theorist, one of the founders of the world's first film school, the Moscow Film School. People's Artist of the RSFSR (1969). Lev Kuleshov was born in 1899 into an intellectual Russian family. At the time he was born, the family became financially broke, lost their estate and moved to Tambov, living a modest life. In 1911 his father died; three years later Lev and his mother moved to Moscow where his elder brother was studying and working as an engineer. Lev Kuleshov decided to follow the steps of his father and entered the Moscow School of Painting, although he didn't finish it. In 1916 he applied to work at the film company led by Aleksandr Khanzhonkov. He produced scenery several pictures but with time he became more interested in film theory. He co-directed his first movie Twilight in 1917. His next film was released under the Soviet patronage. During the 1918-1920 he covered the Russian Civil War with a documentary crew. In 1919 he headed the first Soviet film courses at the National Film School. Kuleshov may well be the very first film theorist as he was a leader in the Soviet montage theory — developing his theories of editing before those of Sergei Eisenstein (briefly a student of Kuleshov). For Kuleshov, the essence of the cinema was editing, the juxtaposition of one shot with another. To illustrate this principle, he created what has come to be known as the Kuleshov Effect. In this now-famous editing exercise, shots of an actor were intercut with various meaningful images (a casket, a bowl of soup, etc.) in order to show how editing changes viewers' interpretations of images. In addition to his theoretical and teaching work, Kuleshov also directed a number of feature-length films. Among his most notable works is an action-comedy The Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land of the Bolsheviks (1924), a psychological drama By the Law (1926) adapted from the short story by Jack London and a biographical drama The Great Consoler (1933) based on O. Henry's life and works. After directing his last film in 1943, Kuleshov served as an artistic director and an academic rector at VGIK where he worked for the next 25 years. Lev Kuleshov died in Moscow in 1970. He was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery. He was survived by his wife Aleksandra Khokhlova (1897—1985) — an actress, film director and educator and her son from the first marriage.

Known For

Director

1943
We from the Urals

as Director

1942
Timur's Oath

as Director

1942
Young Partisans

as Director

1940
Siberians

as Director

1934
Dokhunda

as Director

1933
The Great Consoler

as Director

1932
Horizon

as Director

1931
Forty Hearts

as Director

1930
The Backlog!

as Director

1929
Two-Buldi-Two

as Director

1929
The Happy Canary

as Director

1927
Your Friend

as Director

1926
By the Law

as Director

1925
The Death Ray

as Director

1919
Kuleshov Effect

as Director

1918
1918

Art

1933
The Great Consoler

as Production Design

1918
Engineer Prite's Project

as Production Design

1918
Miss Meri

as Production Design

1918
Boulevard Slush

as Production Design

1917
For Happiness

as Production Design

1917
The Alarm

as Production Design

1917
The King of Paris

as Production Design

1917
Black Love

as Production Design

Editor

1940
Siberians

as Editor

1927
Your Friend

as Editor

1919
Kuleshov Effect

as Editor

1919
Taras's Dream

as Editor

1919
Smelchak

as Editor

Actor

1969
1940
Our Cinema

as (archive footage)

1917
For Happiness

as Enrico, painter

Writer

1932
Horizon

as Writer

1930
Sasha

as Screenplay

1926
By the Law

as Writer