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The Life and Deeds of the Immortal Leader Karaore

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Wikipedia article




'The Life and Deeds of the Immortal Leader Karaore' , or simply 'Karaore' , is a 1911 Serbian silent film directed by Ilija Stanojevi and starring Milorad Petrovi. It was the first feature film released in Serbia and the Balkans. Petrovi portrays the eponymous rebel leader Karaore, who led the First Serbian Uprising of 18041813.

'Karaore' was first conceived by the aspiring film producer Svetozar Botori, the owner of Serbia's first cinema. Following an unsuccessful attempt to secure government funding for the project, Botori decided to personally finance the film. Actors from the National Theatre were cast in the leading roles. Botori had worked with a cinematographer, Louis de Bery, in the past for filming newsreels, and used him again. Principal photography ran through July and August 1911, and took place in and around Belgrade. The film was well received following its Belgrade premiere in October 1911. Although it was financially successful at home, Path opted not to distribute it abroad. The decision steered Botori into precarious financial straits, as the film's domestic box office revenues were barely enough to cover the cost of production. After several further unsuccessful attempts at getting international distribution for his films, Botori left the film industry altogether.

In 1928, 'Karaore' was last screened to a group of Serbian migrs living in the United States. The last known copy went missing in 1947 or 1948, and for many decades thereafter, the film was considered lost. In July 2003, a largely intact copy was discovered in Vienna by researchers from the Yugoslav Film Archive. The film was subsequently restored in time to be screened on the 200th anniversary of the outbreak of the First Serbian Uprising, in February 2004. The film underwent digital restoration in 2011; the digitally restored version of 'Karaore' was subsequently screened on the 100th anniversary of its release. In December 2016, the Yugoslav Film Archive declared the film to be a piece of "cultural heritage of exceptional importance".

Plot



The film opens with an adolescent Karaore (Milorad Petrovi) killing an Ottoman official (Ilija Stanojevi). The murder turns Karaore into a fugitive. Following an unsuccessful rebellion against the Ottomans, Karaore is forced to flee Serbia and seek refuge in the Austrian Empire, across the Sava River. When Karaore's father refuses to accompany his son out of the country, Karaore kills him. After spending a period of time in Austria, Karaore returns to Serbia. In February 1804, following the Slaughter of the Knezes, surviving Serbian notables gather at the Oraac Assembly and decide to rebel against the 'Dahije', the renegade Janissaries who precipitated the massacre. The notables propose that Karaore lead the insurrection, given his prior military experience. He initially declines their offer, but ultimately relents; the First Serbian Uprising begins. The 'Dahije' soon foresee their downfall, witnessing their fates reflected in a bowl of water drawn from the Danube.

Karaore defeats the 'Dahije', but ends up turning on the Sultan, who had earlier offered to support Karaore in his struggle against the rogue Janissaries. Karaore scores a string of victories against the Porte, routing the Ottomans at the Battle of Miar, and eventually seizing Belgrade. The uprising continues for nearly a decade but is ultimately defeated and Karaore is forced to flee to Austria once again. In 1817, he decides to return to Serbia to lead a new rebellion. Karaore's chief rival, Milo Obrenovi, is made aware of this development. He arranges a meeting with Vujica Vulievi, an erstwhile friend of Karaore now on Obrenovi's payroll, and orders that Karaore be killed. When Karaore returns to Serbia, Vulievi offers him a tent in a forest, and while he is sleeping, shoots and kills him with a rifle. The film ends with a passage from 'The Mountain Wreath', an epic poem written by Njego, the national poet of Serbia and Montenegro. The actors then perform a curtain call.

Cast



* Milorad Petrovi as Karaore, the leader of the First Serbian Uprising

* Ilija Stanojevi as Vujica Vulievi, a sipahi and a sycophantic follower of Karaore

* Jevrem Boovi as five different characters, including Karaore's father and Milo Obrenovi

* Sava Todorovi as Mehmed-aga Foi, one of the leaders of the 'Dahije'

* Dragoljub Sotirovi as Hajduk Veljko and Karaore's brother, Marinko

* Vukosava Jurkovi as Marica, Karaore's mother

* Dobrica Milutinovi as Janko Kati, one of the organizers of the First Serbian Uprising

* Aleksandar Milojevi as Mateja Nenadovi, one of the leaders of the First Serbian Uprising

* Milorad Petrovi as an adolescent Karaore

Production



Origins

by Vladimir Borovikovsky,

Serbia's first movie theatre, the Paris Cinema, located inside the eponymous Hotel Paris, at Belgrade's Terazije Square, was opened by the hotelier Svetozar Botori in December 1908. Up until that point, films could only be viewed in traveling theatres which periodically visited Serbia's large cities. Very few members of the country's intelligentsia considered cinema to have any cultural value and fewer still deemed it financially rewarding. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Botori was convinced that film could be turned into a profitable endeavour. In 1909, he signed a contract with the French cinematographic firm Path, becoming their representative in Serbia and Bulgaria. In this capacity, he held exclusive Balkan premieres of Path's films in his hotel. Botori also regularly produced newsreels about local events on Path's behalf, with the firm providing filming equipment and a cameraman (Louis de Bery), and Botori giving them a share of his admission profits. In 1911, Botori teamed up with the prominent stage actor Ilija Stanojevi to establish the Union for the Production of Serbian Films .

Botori was inspired to produce feature films after seeing Charles Le Bargy and Andr Calmettes's 'The Assassination of the Duke of Guise' , an early example of narrative cinema. Up until that point, all films made in Serbia were documentary and ethnological films, covering events of historical significance such as official functions and state ceremonies to events of a more banal nature, such as common people on Belgrade's streets going about their daily lives. Immediately, Botori came upon the idea of producing a film about the 19th-century revolutionary Karaore. The Karaorevi dynasty, with King Peter at its head, had returned to power in 1903 through a coup d'tat, usurping the rival Obrenovi dynasty. Owing to the violent nature of the coup, the Karaorevi dynasty faced several years of international isolation. Improving the royal family's public image abroad was thus made a priority. Botori, who hoped to secure government funding for his future cinematic endeavors, thus felt that a feature film about Karaore would improve cinema's reputation domestically and increase its profile in the eyes of Serbia's leaders.

'Karaore' was based on a number of sources, namely an eponymous stage play by the playwright Milo Cveti, various biographies and hagiographies about the rebel leader, as well as the epic poem 'The Start of the Revolt Against the Dahijas' , which is traditionally attributed to the bard Filip Vinji. The film's screenplay was written by Stanojevi, ira Manok, and an individual credited only by their surname, "Savkovi".

Casting and cinematography

In order to lend the project greater credibility, Botori enlisted actors from the National Theatre for the film. Milorad Petrovi, a veteran stage actor, was given the role of Karaore. The child actor who played the adolescent Karaore was coincidentally also named Milorad Petrovi. Jevrem Boovi played five different characters, including Karaore's father and Karaore's rival Milo Obrenovi. Sava Todorovi was cast as Mehmed-aga Foi, one of the leaders of the 'Dahije'. Stanojevi played Vulievi, as well as a sipahi and a sycophantic follower. Matija Nenadovi was played by Aleksandar Milojevi. The part of Hajduk Veljko was played by Dragoljub Sotirovi, who also played the part of Karaore's brother Marinko. Dobrica Milutinovi appeared on screen as the rebel leader Janko Kati. Vukosava Jurkovi played the role of Karaore's mother, Marica.

'Karaore' was directed by Stanojevi. The film had a total budget of 20,000 dinars. Botori had attempted to persuade the Royal Serbian Government to finance the film, but without success. 'Karaore' was filmed in Belgrade and its environs. Principal photography lasted from mid-July to mid-August 1911. De Bery, whom Botori had employed to film newsreels in the past, was the film's cinematographer. Outdoor scenes, such as the ones depicting the Oraac Assembly and the Battle of Miar, were shot on the banks of the Danube and the Sava, mostly at Ada Ciganlija, as well as at the Belgrade Fortress, Topider park, and the Banjica forest. More than 1,000 extras were used. Indoor scenes were filmed at the Hotel Paris, with props and set pieces provided by the National Theatre. Once filming was complete, the negatives were sent to Paris to be developed by Path.

Release



Contemporary reception



'Karaore' premiered at the Hotel Paris on . This screening was attended only by members of the press. The same day, the film was screened before King Peter at what is now referred to as the Old Palace. It premiered before the general public on , also at the Hotel Paris. Although officially titled 'The Life and Deeds of the Immortal Leader Karaore' , the film was simply distributed as 'Karaore'. It was the first feature film to be released in Serbia, as well as in the Balkans more broadly.

'Karaore' was a financial success domestically. A review published in the Belgrade daily 'Veernje novosti', dated , states: "The picture was well choreographed, with clean camerawork. ... [I]t will cause a real sensation wherever it is shown." Although successful domestically, Path refused to distribute the film abroad and reached a similar business decision with regard to its sister film, 'Ulrich of Cilli and Ladislaus Hunyadi' . Instead, Path opted for an ethnographic short whose subject was a Romani wedding at Ada Ciganlija, which became the first Serbian film to be screened abroad. Because Path had decided against distributing 'Karaore' internationally, Botori relied on the film's domestic box office revenue to recoup expenses, which it was barely able to cover.

Having invested significant amounts of time and money in feature films and receiving little in return, Botori decided that they were not worth the effort. Commercial film production came to a virtual halt following the outbreak of World War I. During the Austro-Hungarian, German and Bulgarian invasion of Serbia in late 1915, Botori was taken prisoner. He died in an Austro-Hungarian internment camp the following year. Stanojevi was also apparently dissuaded from partaking in feature films and remained committed to theatrical performances for the remainder of his life. De Bery resumed filming newsreels.

Rediscovery



The film was last screened before a group of Serbian migrs in the United States in 1928. A copy of it existed in Belgrade until 1947 or 1948, when its owner tossed it into the Danube to avoid being persecuted by Yugoslavia's new communist government. Film historians and archivists began searching for a surviving print of 'Karaore' as early as 1963. In response to inquiries from the Yugoslav Film Archive, Path announced that it did not possess a film titled 'Karaore' in its archives. It also stated that it had no record of a cinematographer named Louis de Bery ever being on its payroll. In 1969, on behalf of the Yugoslav Film Archive, the film historian Dejan Kosanovi examined the collection of the 'Cinmathque Franaise' in Paris, to no avail. In 1992, the premises of the Royal Compound in Belgrade's prestigious Dedinje neighbourhood were searched after a tip from Prince Tomislav, who stated that his father, King Alexander, once had a copy of the film in his possession and viewed it regularly. The search did not yield any results.

In the early 2000s, scholars from the Yugoslav Film Archive resumed their attempts to find a surviving print of the film. The effort was spearheaded by Aleksandar Erdeljanovi and Radoslav Zelenovi of the Yugoslav Film Archive. In the course of his research, Erdeljanovi discovered that de Bery was a Hungarian cinematographer, not a French one, whose real name was Lajos Zoltan rpd Pitrolf, thus resolving the mystery of why Path did not have him listed on their payroll. In 2003, Erdeljanovi came into contact with Nikolaus Wostry, the director of the Austrian Film Archive in Vienna. Wostry informed him that his institution was in possession of a number of early 20th century Serbian films, including a feature film. When Wostry described the contents of the feature, Erdeljanovi became convinced that the Austrian Film Archive had a copy of 'Karaore' in its possession. On 16 July 2003, Erdeljanovi visited the Austrian Film Archive to view the footage for himself, after which he confirmed that the print in the archive's possession was in fact 'Karaore'.

Damaged, but largely intact, the print was found among the effects of Ignaz Reinthaler, who had owned a cinema in Osijek before and during World War I, but relocated to Austria following Austria-Hungary's dissolution. It had been donated to the Austrian Film Archive by Reinthaler's widow more than twenty years earlier.

Restoration



A storied institute with one of the largest film collections in the world, the Yugoslav Film Archive had been plagued by years of systematic neglect and a persistent lack of funds by the time of the film's rediscovery. The recovered print was mostly in good condition, with the exception of some sections damaged from exposure to the elements. Since the original running time of the film is unknown, it is unclear how much of it was recovered and how much remains missing.

The restoration process experienced multiple hurdles. Erdeljanovi had been given a VHS copy of the film and not the original film stock, which made the restoration process more difficult. Additionally, much of the footage was out of chronological order. According to Erdeljanovi, the film's lack of intertitles posed the most significant challenge. Contemporary Serbian films did not contain intertitles. Instead, an "interpreter" would rise between rolls and explain to the audience what had transpired in the previous roll. Serbian films did not begin using intertitles until 1912, a year after the film's release. Upon discovering the literary and epic source material upon which the film was based, Erdeljanovi and his colleagues at the Yugoslav Film Archive decided to write the intertitles themselves. The film was subsequently taken to a laboratory in Rome, where it was digitized.

The rediscovered footage was first screened to the public at the National Theatre on 14 February 2004, coinciding with the 200th anniversary of the start of the First Serbian Uprising. It was screened alongside an accompanying score created by the composer Vladimir Pejkovi. Later in 2004, the film was released on DVD by the Yugoslav Film Archive with separate Serbian and English menus, as well as intertitles in both languages. The DVD release also features a twenty-minute documentary chronicling the film's rediscovery.

In 2011, 'Karaore' underwent digital restoration to mark the 100th anniversary of its release. Digitally restoring the film was an arduous and painstaking affair. "To restore 10 to 15 minutes of film can take two to three months," Erdeljanovi said. The restoration process ultimately took more than a year. It was overseen by Erdeljanovi, in his capacity as the head of the Yugoslav Film Archive. The film specialists Dubravko and Marija Badali, Lazar Lisinac, Bojan Perkovi and Stevan Stani also contributed their expertise. The digitally restored version of the film was ultimately released on DVD.

Critical analysis



'Karaore' was one of many historical films produced in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century; it was thus a product of its time. Subjects such as the struggle against the Ottoman Empire would continue to dominate Serbian cinema for decades to come. The film historian Michael Stoil describes 'Karaore' as a propaganda film designed to shore up support for the ruling Karaorevi dynasty. "['K']'araore' and similar works were conceived as historical pageants rather than historical drama," Stoil writes. "They were celebrations of well-known leaders, events, and mass virtues, constituting appeals to enroll the Balkan masses in support of nationalism and the ruling dynasties, a recurrent theme among urban intelligentsia on the eve of the Balkan Wars and afterwards." The film scholar Vlastimir Sudar criticizes Stoil's take, because at the time it was written, 'Karaore' had not been seen in decades. "From today's perspective, it is a static 'film d'art', a historical spectacle with 'tableaux vivants', 'mise-en-scne', and baroque, emotionally emphatic intertitles," the film scholar Nevena Dakovi writes. "Anticipating the wave of Serbian historical spectacles in the 1930s, the film fuels national sentiments and consciousness, celebrates national identity, and broadly participates in what Eric Hobsbawm has called "invention of the tradition" by glorifying and mythologizing a past that determines the shape of things to come."

Erdeljanovi categorizes the extant portions of the film into 16 distinct episodes, eleven of which were shot outdoors and five of which were shot indoors. With the exception of the Battle of Miar, the film's remaining scenes featured static camerawork, simple framing and no cuts. "Many scenes, particularly interiors, look "stagey" in the style familiar from much early cinema," the film scholar Roger Smither writes. "On the whole, action is filmed in medium shot, with next to no camera movement and no close-ups. Emotion is represented by grand gestures and frequent tableaux." Nonetheless, the academics Mira and Antonn J. Liehm believe that 'Karaore' represented a "crossing of boundaries between stage and screen". As Sudar notes, earlier European films such as 'The Assassination of the Duke of Guise' represented little more than filmed theatre performances. Smither praises the staging of the Battle of Miar, in particular. "Such moments show real panache," he writes, "and give the film considerable interest in its own right, as well as the automatic value it has on account of its remarkable history."

Legacy



Although the film was popular with the Serbian public, it failed to pique the interest of the country's leadership, and the Royal Serbian Government offered virtually no financial support to Serbia's nascent film industry in subsequent years. Sudar writes that Botori's attempts to transform the public's perception of cinema from "mindless entertainment" to a legitimate art form, though primarily motivated by the prospect of financial reward, "may now be perceived as noble". Prior to its rediscovery, 'Karaore' and early Serbian cinema more broadly had generally been overlooked by academics and scholars, who were of the belief that such motion pictures were of little historical or cinematic value. "Once the film had been restored and screened," Sudar writes, "it was evident that it was advanced for its time."

In 2011, Serbia's national postal service, 'Pota Srbije', released a postage stamp commemorating the film's release. In 2012, 'Karaore' was nominated for UNESCO's Memory of the World Register by the Yugoslav Film Archive. As of 2019, the Miroslav Gospel, Nikola Tesla's archive and Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against Serbia are the only items from Serbia listed by the register. In December 2016, the Yugoslav Film Archive declared 'Karaore' to be a piece of "cultural heritage of exceptional importance", leaving the decision to be ratified by the Ministry of Culture and Information and the National Assembly of Serbia.

See also



* List of Serbian films

* List of rediscovered films

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