
Izrail Goldshtein
Directing
Biography
Izrail Tsalovich (Tsalovich) Goldshtein (February 2, 1918 – February 17, 2003, Kyiv) was a Soviet and Ukrainian cinematographer and documentary filmmaker. He was named an Honored Artist of the Ukrainian SSR in 1988. Laureate of the Gold Medal of the Academy of Arts of Ukraine. People's Artist of Ukraine (2001). He enrolled at the Kyiv Film Institute, later transferring to the cinematography department of the All-Union State Institute of Cinematography (L. Kosmatov's workshop), which he graduated from in 1939. In 1940–1941, he was a cinematographer at the Ukrainian Film Chronicle Studio. He participated in World War II and was a member of the group of frontline cinematographers of the Central Documentary Film Studio. From January 1942, he was in the film group of the Southwestern and Don Fronts. From September 1942 to 1944, he was a member of the film group of the Stalingrad and Central Fronts. In 1944–1945, he was a member of the film group of the 1st Ukrainian Front. [2] From 1945 to 1997, he was a cameraman and director at the Ukrkinochronika studio. From 1980, he taught at the Karpenko-Karyi Kyiv State Institute of Theatre Arts. He was a member of the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR (1958). In his later years, he walked with a cane, and due to increasing pain, he switched to a wheelchair—his hip joint was deteriorating. In 1998, filmmakers and concerned individuals raised funds for surgery, and his joint was replaced with an artificial one. In his nineties, he continued to go to film shoots. His chronicle work was used in films by Alexander Dovzhenko. Vladlen Kuznetsov shot almost three dozen films with him. He died in 2003 in Kyiv. In 2001, the Kyivnaukfilm studio made a documentary about him, Passengers of the Last Century, directed by V. Olander.
Known For

Documentary about post-Soviet society’s abandonment of cinema in favour of the free market.
A Farewell To Cinema

No description available.
Not Only About Fashion

No description available.
Up to sixteen

Documentary about the destruction of the Wall of Memory, the monumental avant-garde reliefs at Kyiv crematorium that artists Ada Rybachuk and Volodymyr Melnichenko had been working on since 1968, after local authorities concreted them over in 1982.
The Wall

No description available.
When the City Falls Asleep

No description available.
The case of Father Pamfiliy

The film is dedicated to the memory of the victims of Babyn Yar. A memorial service and a requiem rally are shown. The writer I. F. Drach makes a speech. Photo and film documents from the Second World War are used.
Babyn Yar

Documentary film created in 1990 based on the script of artists Ada Rybachuk and Volodymyr Melnichenko. Picturesque landscapes of Kolguyev Island, conversations with the Nenets, intimate personal reflections of Volodymyr and Ada and their work in the workshop. "The Cry of the Bird" is a philosophical parable, the main character of which is the Kolguyev Island.
The Cry of the Bird

No description available.
What‘s in the Soul?

No description available.
Made in USA

Poet Borys Oliynyk, as well as party officials and local residents, recount the coordinated cleanup efforts following the accident at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant.
The Pain and Courage of Chornobyl

Nameless monologues against the backdrop of a bustling city and relatives seeing off to a medical-labor prophylactic center.