The Spirit Of Genius: Feodor Khitruk
To many, Feodor Khitruk may be more or less an unknown
quantity. His prime films were made during the "Cold War" years,
and did not find wide distribution in the west, even though they won prizes
at film festivals like Cannes, Venice, Oberhausen and New York. Khitruk himself
was active in ASIFA, and appeared at many festivals as a distinguished guest,
without his films being seen too often... Otto Alder's fascinating 1998 hour-long
documentary, The Spirit Of Genius, goes a considerable way toward redressing
the situation. Spoken mainly in German, with an English version that uses
both subtitles and some voice narration, Alder's film documents not only Khitruk's
life but the whole milieu of soviet animation.
A Brilliant Man
At the very beginning of the film, some 10 people, including prominent
animators like Yuri Norstein and Eduard Nazarov, give brief testimonials about
Khitruk. Their statements approach idolatry: Andrei Khrzanovsky hails Khitruk's
films as "absolute masterpieces," Mikhail Aldashin says Khitruk
is "the personification of goodness" and Aleksandr Tatarsky says
he is like Christ... The viewer may suspect that some flattery or blind adulation
lies behind this acclaim, but when Khitruk himself speaks, it is easy to understand.
He is wise and philosophical: "The animator, like God, breathes a soul
into his creations...," "Animation contains all the other artforms:
the art of acting, the concentrated emotion of poetry...," "It takes
two to make art: the artist and the audience...." Moreover, he is generous,
patient, witty, urbane, etc., etc., etc.
Khitruk's life itself is fascinating. Born in 1917 of a Jewish mother and
an ardent Communist father, he went to school in Moscow at the time when the
great films of Eisenstein were screening at the local cinemas. In 1931 his
father was sent to Berlin on goverment business, so Feodor attended a school
of commercial art in Stuttgart and reveled in the glories of the classical
music of conductor Otto Klemperer and the great tenors Josef Schmidt and Richard
Tauber -- and he saw them banned with the rise of Nazism, before the family
returned to Moscow in 1934. A screening of Disney's Three Little Pigs
made him want to be an animator, and he joined the state-run animation studio
in 1937, where he worked primarily on children's films. He was drafted into
the army, and served until 1948 since his knowledge of German and Germany
made him an ideal translator for the post-war occupation. By 1949 he was back
in the government animation studios, working as an animator for the "Russian
Disney" Ivan Ivanov-Vano on features like The Snow Queen, and
shorter films like the delightful The Magic Toyshop and a version of
Pinocchio, Buratino. Around 1960 he became a director in his
own right, and began to produce art-films with serious messages, creating
for Russia (despite the stern censorship of the arts) something like the revolution
in graphic style of UPA and Zagreb, and the dark social criticism of Polish
animators like Jan Lenica and Walerian Borowczyk. The success of films like
Story Of A Crime, Film Film Film, Man In A Frame and
his Winnie The Pooh adaptation, The Little Bear, made him the
dean of a whole generation of young animators, whom he taught and supported
tirelessly.
























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