Aleksandr Askol'dov's Commissar
is based on Vasilii Grossman's "In the Town of Berdichev" (1934), a
story of a female commissar who gives up her baby to a Jewish family
during the Polish-Soviet War in order to return to the front. While
Grossman's story was praised, including by Maksim Gor'kii, Askol'dov's
Commissar (1967) was "shelved" and stored in the Gosfil'mofond
archives for twenty years. Made to honor the 50th
anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution, Commissar was finally
released shortly after the 15th Moscow International Film
Festival in 1987. The film received several unpublicized screenings in
the Soviet Union, but was an enormous success at international film
festivals the following year.
Commissar takes
advantage of the dichotomy between Jewish and Soviet ideals in order to
pit the private space of the family against the public space of civic
duty: Klavdiia Vavilova, the commissar of a Red Army Unit, must decide
between caring for her new-born child and fighting in the Civil War.
While "In the Town of Berdichev" celebrates the decision to
abandon one's child for the cause of the revolution, Commissar
ultimately sympathizes with the private, politically disinterested
ideals of the Jewish family. The clash of ideologies between the two
groups is transcended by the birth of the child and comrade Vavilova's
subsequent transformation into a mother. She briefly loses sight of the
revolution, staying with the family as the Red Army begins to leave the
town. In these moments, Vavilova not only participates as an integral
part of her substitute family, but also behaves "like a Jewish mother."
Commissar's
depiction of Jews focuses on one family, in which the father, Efim,
advocates an "International of kindness" instead of any form of
Bolshevism. Rolan Bykov, Raisa Nedashkovskaia, and Liudmila Volynskaia
give masterful performances as Jews, whose "otherness" is reinforced by
Nonna Mordiukova's portrayal of the commissar. Language and song play a
major role in shaping each character's Jewishness: Volynskaia, who plays
Efim's mother, speaks in Yiddish throughout the film; Bykov's almost
theatrical dance and song performances unexpectedly emerge in several
scenes, placing Jewish folk culture alongside more serious questions of
life and death in the film.
Commissar's
treatment of Jewishness allows Askol'dov to explore topics other than
the individual's relationship to the state. The film comments on the
plight of the Jews under the Russians, Soviets, and later under the
Nazis in the Great Patriotic War, a topic that was rarely addressed in
film. Vavilova's visions of Efim and his family marching into a
concentration camp do not portray the family as Soviets, but as Jews,
all wearing the Star of David. They are separate from Vavilova, who
stands holding her child and can only bear witness to the scene.
Aleksandr Askol'dov was
never allowed to direct another film. Commissar's legacy
is strongly tied with the director's struggle to have the film
released. The film makes extensive use of vivid flashbacks and flashforwards, all captured by violent camera movement and point of view
shots. Askol'dov relies on asynchronous sound during flashback scenes
to link events together, most notably during Vavilova's labor in the
childbirth scene, where her cries are heard over the action of numerous
intercut flashbacks.
Commissar's
exploration of Jewish and Soviet identities universalizes human
experience. The film seeks to focus the viewer's attention on the value
of human life, rather than on the differences between two world views.
Although Commissar may not take a neutral stance in this task,
the film seeks to move beyond Soviet and Jewish questions: questions
that censors could not ignore at the time of the film's release.
Aleksandr Askol'dov
Aleksandr Askol'dov (born
in 1932) graduated from the Department of Philology at Moscow State
University in 1955. He continued his studies at the Department of
Soviet
Literature in the Writer's Union, studying directing and
screenwriting under Georgii Tovstonogov. Askol'dov submitted the script
for Commissar in 1965 and completed the project in 1967. On 11
March 1969 he was relieved of his position as assistant-director, and on
15 December 1969 was expelled from the Communist Party and blacklisted
from working in the film industry. Askol'dov's Party ban was lifted in
1971. He successfully protested for the film's release at the 1987
Moscow International Film Festival, claiming that the film's suppression
reflected the failures of glasnost. Askol'dov later received numerous
awards for Commissar, including four at the 38th
International Film Festival in West Berlin.
Filmography
1967 Commissar (released
1987)