Cinema of Rupture: Urbicide, Eastern European Rubble Films, and the Documentary Impulse

Zdenko Mandušić
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Abstract

Currently in Ukraine, and previously in conflicts such as the Bosnian War (1992–96), local film collectives have expanded the mediation of wars to include the perspectives of those close to their subjects, foregrounding the participation of filmmakers in the wartime urban setting. In the 1990s, during the four‐year‐long siege of Bosnia’s capital, the collective Sarajevo Group of Artists (SAGA) produced sixty films of varying lengths, many of which included footage of destroyed buildings. Since 2014, several Ukrainian video projects and collectives, including Babylon’13, Freefilmers, War Against War, and Thickets (Khashchi), have made films documenting various aspects of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Although there is no evidence of direct influence, structural and contextual similarities make SAGA an important earlier model for Ukrainian collectives of local filmmakers determined to define the consequences and experiences of war from the perspective of those with personal stakes in the conflict. This essay comparatively examines the creative wartime documentaries of Bosnian and Ukrainian film collectives specifically to consider how filmmakers with close personal connections to conflicts produce documentary representations of wartime destruction
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破裂的电影:城市屠杀》、东欧废墟电影和纪录片冲动
目前在乌克兰,以及之前在波斯尼亚战争(1992-96)等冲突中,当地的电影集体已经扩大了对战争的调解,包括那些与他们的主题接近的人的观点,使电影制作人在战时城市环境中的参与成为前景。20世纪90年代,在波斯尼亚首都被围困的四年期间,萨拉热窝艺术家团体(SAGA)制作了60部不同长度的电影,其中许多都有被毁建筑的镜头。自2014年以来,几个乌克兰视频项目和集体,包括巴比伦' 13,自由电影,战争反对战争和丛林(卡什奇),拍摄了记录俄罗斯入侵乌克兰的各个方面的电影。虽然没有直接影响的证据,但结构和背景的相似性使SAGA成为乌克兰当地电影制作人集体的重要早期模型,他们决心从冲突中个人利益的角度来定义战争的后果和经历。本文比较研究了波斯尼亚和乌克兰电影集体的战时纪录片创作,特别考虑与冲突有密切个人联系的电影人如何制作战时破坏的纪录片
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