Toronto Silent Film Festival: STRIKE (1925)
Runtime: 95 mins | Release Year: 1925 | Rating: | Genre(s): Drama
Production Country: Soviet Union | Original Language: No Language
Showtimes

With live accompaniment by Tania Gill
The Master Debuts.
Sergei Eisenstein’s Strike 1925, apart from Orson Welle’s feature directorial debut, marks one of the most profound cinematic entrances in film history.
In telling the story of a 1903 strike, triggered by the suicide of a worker after an unjust accusation of theft, and its brutal suppression, Eisenstein experimented using montage, parallel editing, expanded time and intercutting of symbolic images to build the story and emotion on an intertwined path with the characters. It would prove to be a coming out as a director like no other, and one that would change the look of cinema and inspire directors for the next century.
It has all the seeds of his later works but the with an edginess that anchors with the rawness of the story. For many, this first feature at age 26 years would remain his greatest work, surpassing even his other masterpiece Battleship Potemkin, for sheer brilliance and power.
Part of the Toronto Silent Film Festival series!
Cast/Crew Info
Director: Sergei Eisenstein | Cast: Maksim Shtraukh, Ivan Klyukvin, Aleksandr Antonov, Vladimir Uralskiy, Anatoliy Kuznetsov
