Yelizaveta Ignatevna Svilova (Russian: Елизаве́та Игна́тьевна Сви́лова, rendered in Latin as Elizaveta Svilova) (5 September 1900, Moscow – 11 November 1975, Moscow) was a Russian filmmaker and film editor. She is perhaps best known for making films with her husband Dziga Vertov and her brother-in-law Mikhail Kaufman. She is also known for her documentaries about World War II and for appearing in and editing Man with a Movie Camera (1929).
Three Heroines
(Writer)
Three Heroines
(Director)
Lluvia de jaulas
(Thanks)
Auschwitz
(Director)
Auschwitz
(Writer)
Milan Fair
(Director)
The Tungus
(Director)
For You at the Front!
(Director)
In Memory of Sergo Ordzhonikidze
(Assistant Director)
Kino-Pravda No. 14
(Editor)
A Sixth Part of the World
(Assistant Editor)
A Sixth Part of the World
(Assistant Director)
Three Songs About Lenin
(Assistant Director)
Bukhara
(Director)
Kino-Pravda No. 7
(Editor)
Kino-Pravda No. 22: Lenin Is Alive in the Heart of the Peasant. A Film Story
(Editor)
Kino-Pravda No. 17
(Editor)
Enthusiasm. Symphony of Donbas
(Assistant Director)
The Eleventh Year
(Assistant Director)
Man with a Movie Camera
(Editor)
Kino Eye
(Editor)
Nuremberg Trials
(Director)
Velikoye proshchaniye
(Director)
Stride, Soviet!
(Assistant Director)
World Without a Game
(Script Consultant)
Parade of Youth
(Director)
The Fall of Berlin
(Editor)
The Fall of Berlin
(Director)
The Tungus
(Editor)