Esfir Shub

from Surazh, Russian Empire

Artwork for Esfir Shub in Close-UpImage of Esfir Shub

Biography

Esfir Shub, also referred to as Esther Il'inichna Shub, was a pioneering Soviet filmmaker and editor in both the mainstream and documentary fields. She was one of few women to play a significant role behind the scenes in the Soviet film industry. She is best known for her trilogy of films, Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (1927), The Great Road (1927), and The Russia of Nicholas II and Leo Tolstoy (1928). Shub is credited as the creator of compilation film.

Esfir Shub was born into a family of landowners. She studied literature in Moscow, but after Revolution she began to attend the classes at the Institute for Women's Higher Education and then got a job as a 'theater officer' at the State Commissariat of Education. In the theatre she worked in collaboration with the famous avant-garde director Meyerhold and the poet Mayakovsky, who was one of her friends.

Shub joined the Goskino film company and met Dziga Vertov. Their professional friendship was lifelong, but stormy. Shub shared his belief in film's intrinsic ability to reveal aspects of reality not visible to the naked eye, but she became engaged more in the interpretation of the historical world than in only contemporary matters.

First Shub worked as a re-editor of foreign films for Soviet distribution. In 1927 (the tenth anniversary of Revolution) she made her first documentary film The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (1927). This film was the first part of the trilogy, which also consists of The Great Road (1927) and Lev Tolstoy and the Russia of Nicolai II (1928). In the process of making the trilogy, Shub had to contend with not only an overwhelming volume of material but also the problem of locating relevant footage. She often found that valuable documents of the pre-war period had been sold abroad or had been badly damaged in ill-equipped newsreel archives. Shub compensated the lack of material by using newly shot footage. Her films derive much of their power from this technique of providing a contemporary context for archival footage. Thus, Shub created the absolutely new genre 'historical compilation film'. She later claimed she just wanted to create 'editorialized newsreels'.

The critics and colleagues admired Shub's work, because she found a middle path between narrative and documentary forms. Sovkino denied her authorial rights for her trilogy claiming that she was just an editor. However, in 1935 Shub was awarded the title Honored Artist of the Republic.

In the beginning of the forties she collaborated with Vsevolod Pudovkin on the successful Twenty Years of Soviet Cinema (1940). Then she left Goskino to become chief editor of the 'News of the Day' at the central studio for documentary film in Moscow. Most of her later years were confined to editing duties. Shub was definitely the most prominent Soviet woman filmmaker of her generation.

Timeline

2018Aged 124

  • Poster for After the Facts

    Self (archive footage)

1972Aged 78

  • Poster for Esfir Shub in Close-Up

    Self (archive footage)

1949Aged 55

  • Poster for With Heartfelt Sincerity

    Editor

  • Poster for On the Other Side of the Araks

    Editor

1942Aged 48

  • Poster for Native Land

    Director

1939Aged 45

  • Poster for Spain

    Director

1932Aged 38

  • Poster for The Komsomol - Chief of Electrification

    Editor

1929Aged 35

  • Poster for Today

    Writer

1928Aged 34

  • Poster for Lev Tolstoy and the Russia of Nicolai II

    Editor

1927Aged 33

  • Poster for The Gentlefolks of Skotinin

    Editor

  • Poster for The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty

    Writer

  • Poster for Prostitute

    Editor

  • Poster for The Great Road

    Writer

1926Aged 32

  • Poster for Abrek Zaur

    Editor

  • Poster for Wings of a Serf

    Editor