Studies In Russian And Soviet Cinema -
Lena threaded the projector herself. The film had no title card, no credits. It opened on a woman’s hands kneading dough in a Leningrad communal kitchen. The camera slowly pulled back to reveal her face: wrinkled, tired, but with eyes that seemed to look directly at Lena through the decades. The woman began to speak. Not about politics. Not about the five-year plan. About her son, lost in Afghanistan. About the telegram that arrived on her birthday. About how she still set a place for him at dinner.
In the autumn of 1991, just weeks before the Soviet flag would be lowered over the Kremlin for the last time, Lena Orlova boarded a cramped commuter train from Moscow to the state film archive at Belye Stolby. She was twenty-three, a recent graduate of VGIK, and she carried with her a single notebook, a half-eaten apple, and a thesis topic that her professors called “unnecessarily narrow”: The Evolution of Female Subjectivity in Soviet Non-Fiction Cinema, 1964–1982. studies in russian and soviet cinema
Lena’s first discovery was a short documentary from 1966 titled The Factory of Dreams , directed by a woman named Yelena Stasova—no relation to the revolutionary, just a coincidence of names. The film followed three young textile workers in Ivanovo as they rehearsed for an amateur musical about Lenin. But Stasova had done something subversive: she kept the camera running after the director yelled “cut.” In those unguarded moments—a girl adjusting a torn stocking, another crying softly into a handkerchief, a third reading a smuggled copy of Akhmatova—Lena saw Soviet womanhood not as ideology, but as life. Lena threaded the projector herself
Her supervisor, the stern and chain-smoking Professor Morozov, had warned her that the topic was political quicksand. “You want to study truth in a system built on beautiful lies?” he’d said, tapping his pencil against a photograph of Dziga Vertov. “Go ahead. But don’t expect the archives to love you back.” The camera slowly pulled back to reveal her
Lena smiled and reached into her bag. She still had the apple core, long since dried into a fossil, from her first day at Belye Stolby. She placed it on the table between them, a relic of a journey that had begun in the dust of a dying empire and ended, unexpectedly, in the light of a shared truth.
When the film ended, Lena sat in the dark, shaking. She realized she had not been studying Soviet cinema. She had been studying survival.
There was no music. No voiceover. Just seventeen minutes of silence and bread and grief.