Sátántangó (1994) Hungary
Sátántangó Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Béla Tarr
Studio:Artificial Eye
Writer:László Krasznahorkai, Béla Tarr
Rating:5.0 (10 votes)
Rated:Suitable for 15 years and over
Date Added:2010-01-14
ASIN:B000HRLWQM
UPC:5021866329307
Price:£29.99
Genre:Period
Release:2006-11-13
Duration:419
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0
Languages:Hungarian
Subtitles:English
Features:Box set, Black and White
Béla Tarr  ...  (Director)
László Krasznahorkai, Béla Tarr  ...  (Writer)
 
Peter Berling  ...  
Janos Derzsi  ...  
Mihaly Vig  ...  
Erzsebet Gaal  ...  
Miklos Szekely  ...  
Summary: I'm not going to bore you with the details of the `story' because first of all nothing really happens and secondly it's not important. Mostly its just people looking in and out of windows, walking, or just being, yet that may be what we're doing also by sitting for 7 hours, watching other people by transcending the barrier of celluloid and sharing in their misery. They say the eyes are the windows of the soul and in these Breughelian faces we see the personality of characters shine through and understand their individual and personal agony. This is what elevates this film beyond cinema and art into something more personal like the experience of music. By the end of the film characters feel like real people that we may intimately know.

Parallels are inevitably drawn with the work other directors like Tarkovsky, most notably `Andrei Rublev' (1966) and `Stalker' (1979). Tarkovsky's films had a sense of religious hope whereas Bela Tarr's have none of that yet I felt a certain amount of elation at the end. Albert Camus said that struggling to the height may be enough to fill a man's heart. How true.

This is a film I've waited several years to see since I first saw `Werkmeister Harmonies' (2000) and `Damnation' (1988) on the Artificial Eye DVD release. Rumour circulated for a long time about this eventual release and finally we have it. It's a film more have heard about than actually seen and has always been highly revered among cineastes. Satantango is filled with some of the most remarkable cinematography I've ever seen. So was it worth the wait? Absolutely.

Bela Tarr may be the greatest living director working today.

Highly recommended viewing.