Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Love and defection
- 2 The enemy within
- 3 Projecting a prophet for profit
- 4 Of gods and moguls
- 5 Negotiable dissent
- 6 Turning a negative into a positive
- 7 A cowboy in combats
- 8 Secrets and lies
- 9 The empire strikes back
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Film Index
- General Index
1 - Love and defection
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Love and defection
- 2 The enemy within
- 3 Projecting a prophet for profit
- 4 Of gods and moguls
- 5 Negotiable dissent
- 6 Turning a negative into a positive
- 7 A cowboy in combats
- 8 Secrets and lies
- 9 The empire strikes back
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Film Index
- General Index
Summary
If you have something worthwhile to say, dress it in the glittering robes of entertainment and you will find a ready market … without entertainment no propaganda film is worth a dime.
Darryl Zanuck, Twentieth Century-Fox production chief, 1943It is the mid-1980s and we are about to be treated to a cinematic tale of male bonding, intrigue and high drama, one inspired by real-life events and illuminated by dazzling dance sequences. The movie is Taylor Hackford's White Nights. The rather incongruous setting is Soviet Russia.
Kolya Rodchenko, the world's greatest ballet dancer, is terrified when the Boeing 747 on which he is travelling from London to Japan is forced to make an emergency crash-landing in Siberia. Rodchenko faces double jeopardy, for a decade earlier the Russian defected to the United States, mirroring the bold action taken by the famous dancer-actor playing his part, Mikhail Baryshnikov. The KGB cannot believe its luck. Eager to exact revenge, the security agency brands Rodchenko a criminal and confines him under house arrest, telling the outside world that the superstar has been incapacitated by the plane accident. The Soviet authorities mean to exploit Rodchenko's iconic status for propaganda purposes. He must be persuaded — coerced if necessary — to renounce the West and to perform again at Leningrad's great Kirov Theatre. After that, he will be expendable. To fulfil its aim, the KGB opts for subtle mind games rather than its more familiar strong-arm tactics.
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- Hollywood's Cold War , pp. 9 - 41Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2007