
Contemporary Hero in the Wartime Chronotope
Author(s) -
Aleksey B Muradov,
Ksenia A Shergova
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
vestnik vgik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2713-2471
pISSN - 2074-0832
DOI - 10.17816/vgik9437-50
Subject(s) - character (mathematics) , hero , interpretation (philosophy) , theme (computing) , literature , history , archetype , aesthetics , art , philosophy , linguistics , geometry , mathematics , computer science , operating system
The focal point of the analysis are Tatiana Lioznovas TV-series 17 Moments of Spring. This notable Great Patriotic War movie presents a protagonist that partakes spring 1945 events not as a historical, distanced personality but as a contemporary of the time of the release. This statement is supported with three-layered analysis of the character presentation. The initial layer of analysis implies that Stierlitz character (a Soviet spy, acting deep undercover within the highest ranks of Nazi Germany) develops an idealized presentation of an intelligence officer as in earlier Soviet films. The character does not provide a viewer with the option of self-identification, becoming an archetype - this conversion allocates the story to an epic space, not a historical context. Considering Stierlitz character as a super-spy, a loner implies a second layer of interpretation: a contest-comparison with the most known espionage character of the 20th century, James Bond. Meanwhile the creator shape Stierlitz rather pretentious anti-Bond, they use numerous specific tools to accentuate the difference. Among those we point a time theme that plays an important part in storytelling and general film design (time is present in the series title, it repeatedly returns in soundtrack, and notoriously present in the characters persistent slowness). A few other details involve a third layer of the characters interpretation: Stierlitz embodies contemporary image of a 1960-1970s Soviet technical intelligentsia - in terms of the release a hero of our time. Multilayered interpretation of the Stierlitz character provides 17 Moments of Spring a very specific place in the history of Soviet television and film production. Tatiana Lioznova used a number of creative methods that allowed her to bridge 1945 events with her contemporaries and to significantly contribute into the Soviet archetypal construction.