January 6, 2022

from “State Funeral,” Sergei Loznitza , (film release 2021; footage, 1953)
I’m walking the Silverlake staircases, listening to the audio version of Colm Toibin’s marvelous novel, The Magician, about Thomas Mann. I’m struck to learn how slow Thomas Mann was to understand the dangers posed by the National Socialists in Germany. Mann held such a deep belief in the staying power of German culture, a world of cosmopolitanism, a culture that treasured Wagner and Mahler, Goethe and Rilke. He was convinced those Nazis would “go away.” Even as his eldest son and daughter Klaus and Erica became vocal anti-Nazis, Mann remained unperturbed. After the Nuremberg rally in 1933, his son Golo literally cut out articles from different German papers and laid them out on the dining room table. Look at these, he demanded of his father. “One article says 40,000 attended. Another says 100,000. They will not go away.”
For a break from reading about the rise of the Third Reich, I watched the unsettling and mesmerizing film, “State Funeral” by the Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitza (viewable on http://www.mubi.com).
The film begins: “In the Afternoon of March 5, at 21 hours, 50 minutes, Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin died. “ Sergei Loznitza’s assemblage of color and black and white film shot in the Soviet Union in 1953, constitute “official obsequies” for the death of the mass murderer Stalin, whose body lies in state, in a red-draped coffin surrounded by mounds of lush flowers, “like a Marxist-Leninist Ophelia.” (The Guardian). One doesn’t know how much is real, how much is staged, but the somber sorrowful stupefaction of everyone from schoolchildren to loggers, from Kazakh villagers to Muscovites, is unanimous. (We do not see the zeks in the labor camps however, doff their hats.) Busses halt. Conductors and ticket takers stand with hands on their hearts. Steam engines blast their whistles, factories ring their alarms, soldiers and civilians remove their hats in unison, a portrait of the Great Leader is swung into place via a ginormous crane, like a scene from Fellini. The film is mesmerizing, hundreds of the best cameramen in the Soviet Union were the camera crew; no expense spared.
There’s a provocative conversation afterwards, between a wildly gesticulating Italian director, Pietro Marcello, and the bemused Loznitza, talking about the import of the work. As I watched the film on the eve of the one-year anniversary of the U.S. Capitol insurrection, this quote from Loznitza especially struck me:
“The thought I wanted to express in this film is very simple- Stalin is allegorical of all these people, who have a little Stalin in them, who share all these outlooks, and who compose, like little bricks of this whole apparatus of totalitarian human destruction.
Every time I turn to that time in my mind, and see those picture, which magnetise me too… every time I’m struck by that paradox that unfolds before my eyes. Understanding the nightmare, people, just like these mice, follow the piper, the one who plays the pipe to their doom. “
“Understanding the nightmare, people, just like these mice, follow the piper, the one who plays the pipe to their doom. “
Sergei Loznitza, film director

January 6, 2022 at 4:50 pm
Wonderful post, Lulu. I think the plausibility of a tyranny-run America is finally dawning on us…we’ve been in denial because it’s so horrifying that it’s nigh-impossible to contemplate.
I’m about to order the Toibin book, I’ve heard enough great things now…
Erica Clark ericalouria@yahoo.com
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January 7, 2022 at 9:53 am
a slow dawning on all of us… batten down the hatches.
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January 6, 2022 at 5:25 pm
Another important & informative piece by you.
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January 6, 2022 at 6:53 pm
The picture grabbed me immediately–and then, your words. Especially when you likened the people who were at the Stalin funeral, who felt the funeral, and tied them to those who feel empowered byTrump. These are awful days. And there are too many of those people. I’m prod to have such a smart cousin. — Laura
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January 6, 2022 at 10:10 pm
thank you for this post, Louise. I’m going to look for that film on Mubi. —janie
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January 7, 2022 at 9:52 am
thanks for reading, Janie! sending my warmest. L
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January 7, 2022 at 9:33 am
Excellent, tough piece. Here, the Jamie Roberts documentary— http://jamieroberts.london/four-hours-at-the-capitol—hit German airwaves a couple days ago, and people have been sending it to me in astonishment, and sympathetic horror. The Lonznitza quote about the pied piper feels all too apt.
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January 7, 2022 at 9:52 am
thanks, dear!
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January 7, 2022 at 12:38 pm
Where were the Republicans yesterday, January 6th? For whatever reasons our media has been slow to follow the growth of Nazi and white nationalist groups in US and takeover of Republican party. Thanks Louise for reminding us of larger history.
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January 7, 2022 at 3:24 pm
oh that piper keeps up that same beckoning, maddening tune
thanx Louise for this
we need to sharpen our minds & claws gently, continually
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January 7, 2022 at 8:48 pm
Thank you, yes, horrifying. I appreciate the juxtapositions — I recently finished The Magician but haven’t seen the Loznitza movie. Dede
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