Aelita
Aelita - Der Flug zum Mars

Juri Sawadski, Konstantin Eggert
Aelita | Aelita - Der Flug zum Mars by Jakow Protasanow
UdSSR 1924, Retrospective
Source: Gosfilmofond of Russia

Julija Solnzewa, Aleksandra Peregonez
Aelita | Aelita - Der Flug zum Mars by Jakow Protasanow
UdSSR 1924, Retrospective
Source: Deutsche Kinemathek

Aelita | Aelita - Der Flug zum Mars by Jakow Protasanow
UdSSR 1924, Retrospective
Source: Deutsche Kinemathek

Graphik: Israil Bograd
Aelita | Aelita - Der Flug zum Mars by Jakow Protasanow
UdSSR 1924, Retrospective
Source: Collection of Visual Art Publications Russian State Library, Moscow
The film was the first major foreign success arising from the co-operation between workers’ relief organisation Internationale Arbeiter-Hilfe (IAH) and the Moscow studio. An engineer and a Red Army soldier set off for Mars. The fantastic scenery used to depict the mysterious life found on Mars concealed the fact that the film was telling a turbulent story of love and jealousy occurring in everyday life in Moscow in 1924. The “here and now” of a young couple covertly imparted a great deal of realism. Lively and comical competitions, fought out between the clumsy detective (played by Igor Ilyinski, a star comedian at the time) and a cheerful Red Army soldier (Nikolay Batalov as a robust and endearing nature boy). A post-revolutionary science fiction film full of surprising turns.
Print courtesy of Gosfilmofond, Moscow