Tsar to Lenin

{{Infobox film

| name = Tsar to Lenin

| image = TsarToLenin.jpg

| caption = 2012 Mehring Books DVD cover

| writer = Max Eastman

| director = Herman Axelbank

| editing = Max Eastman

| starring = Max Eastman

| country = United States

| language = English

| producer = Herman Axelbank

| runtime = 63 minutes

| distributor = Lenauer International Films

| released = {{film date|1937|3|6}}

}}

Tsar to Lenin is a documentary and cinematic record of the

Russian Revolution, produced by Herman Axelbank.{{cite web|title=IMDb Tsar To Lenin|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2401196/|publisher=IMDb}} It

premiered on March 6, 1937, at the Filmarte Theatre on Fifty-Eighth

Street in New York City. Pioneer American radical Max Eastman

(1883-1969) narrates the film.{{cite journal|last=Patenaude|first=Bertrand|title=Shooting the Bolsheviks|journal=Hoover Digest|date=April 2012|volume=2|url=http://www.hoover.org/publications/hoover-digest/article/113496|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120416040908/http://www.hoover.org/publications/hoover-digest/article/113496|url-status=dead|archive-date=2012-04-16}} Because of its pro-Trotskyist position, the film was suppressed by the Stalinists of the American Communist Party{{cite book|last=Eastman|first=Max|title=Love and Revolution: My Journey through an Epoch|year=1964|publisher=New York: Random House}} and was only widely available in a shortened format in the Library of Congress{{cite web|title=Russian Films in the Library of Congress|url=https://www.loc.gov/rr/mopic/findaid/russian.html|publisher=Library of Congress}} until its re-release in 2012 by the Socialist Equality Party (US),{{cite news|last=North|first=David|title=Mehring Books Announces Release of Tsar to Lenin in DVD Format|url=https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2012/07/tsar-j05.html|newspaper=World Socialist Web Site|date=5 July 2012}} who state that its predecessor, the Workers League, purchased the film from Axelbank in 1978 and organized showings of the film in the intervening period.{{cite web|last=North|first=David|url=http://tsartolenin.com/intro.html|title=Introduction by David North|publisher=Mehring Books|date=July 2012|access-date=August 23, 2017}}

Cast

Production

The footage was collected by Herman Axelbank, starting in 1920. The

scenes of the film were gathered from more than 100 different cameras

over the course of the next thirteen years. Those behind the camera

include the Tsar's royal photographer, the Tsar himself, Soviet

photographers, military staff photographers of Germany, Great Britain,

Japan and the United States, and others.{{cite web|title=Axelbank, Herman, 1900-1979.|url=http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/xtf/view?docId=axelbank-herman-1900-1979-cr.xml|publisher=Social Networks and Archival Context Project}}

The narration is provided by the American radical Max Eastman, who

was originally slated to write captions to explain the scenes and help

raise money to finance the project.Eastman, Max.

Love and Revolution: My Journey through an Epoch. New York: Random

House, 1964. Eastman was chosen by Axelbank because of Eastman's

close political relations with many leaders of the Bolshevik party,

chiefly with Leon Trotsky. He also was among the first to provide an

account of the political struggle between Trotsky and Joseph Stalin

to the international arena.{{cite web|title=People & Events: Max Forrester Eastman (1883-1969)|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldman/peopleevents/p_eastman.html|publisher=PBS}}

Eastman also provided Axelbank with additional footage, which included

the Tsar swimming with his courtiers, nude. Eastman's narration for this

sequence is, "This is the first time the world has seen a king as he

really is!”{{cite book|last=O'Neill|first=William L.|title=The Last Romantic: A Life of Max Eastman|year=1990|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=0-88738-859-0|pages=173|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7-pHX7No6YIC}}

The film premiered at the Filmarte Theater in New York City on March

6, 1937.

Controversy

The New York Post gave a favorable review of the film, where they

said it was done "extremely well".Nugent, Frank S.

"Tsar to Lenin, a Documentary Film. Edited and Compiled by Max Eastman,

Collected and Produced by Herman Axelbank." Rev. of Tsar to Lenin. New

York Post 9 Mar. 1937

Supporters of Stalin in the US denounced the film. The documentary,

which appeared at the height of the Moscow Trials, showed the chief

defendant, Trotsky, in an extremely favorable light.

Eastman said at the time,

:"Trotsky had led the October insurrection and organized the Red army—the films said so—but Stalin was now in total power. Tsar to Lenin never got the distance of a few dollars beyond the Filmarte Theatre."

Five days after the outpouring of praise, a big-headlined article appeared in the Daily Worker, the daily newspaper of the Communist Party, came out decrying Eastman. It said,

:"Max Eastman, chief apologist for the Trotsky band of traitors to the Soviet Socialist land, has assembled news-reels and documentary clips. This man is an expert in distortion, chicanery, trickery, innuendo, and outright lies … Tzar to Lenin must be boycotted … Protest to the management of the Filmarte Theatre … Make it clear to other theatres that Tzar to Lenin is unadulterated Trotskyist propaganda, and as such cannot be tolerated by the friends of freedom. …Boycott Tzar to Lenin!”

The Filmarte Theater, and others, were then told that they would not be

allowed to show other films such as Sergei Eisenstein's October: Ten Days That Shook the World, effectively ending the first

run of Tsar to Lenin.

References

{{Reflist}}