Bela Tarr retrospective

Walker Art Center in Minneapolis presents regis dialogue and retrospective highlighting the career of filmmaker Béla Tarr
Béla Tarr: Mysterious Harmonies

Film Retrospective and Regis Dialogue
September 14 - October 21
Cinema
Unless otherwise noted, tickets are $8 ($6 Walker members).

“Some of the very few heroic violations of cinematic norms of our times.”—Susan Sontag (on Béla Tarr’s films)

The mesmerizing work of Hungarian filmmaker Béla Tarr, widely considered to be one of the most important auteurs in world cinema, is primarily known to American audiences only through film festivals. His lens captures a Hungary informed by its varied history—from its longstanding empire to the postwar Soviet invasion, from its disheartening years under Communism to its contemporary attempt at privatization. Tarr’s films provocatively examine current alienation and morality, with sublime cinematography and exquisitely languid pacing. Drawing his influences from Italian Neorealism and the French New Wave, he has in turn greatly influenced a younger generation of filmmakers such as Gus Van Sant and Jim Jarmusch.

There is a clear division between Tarr’s earlier and more recent work. He made his first feature, Family Nest (1979), at age 22. Like successors The Outsider (1981) and The Prefab People (1982), the film was created in a cinema verité style, with an aesthetic of non-actors in actual locations. These films center on the working class and explore such issues as the 1970s Budapest housing shortage from a familial perspective. Shot mainly in close-ups, the films from Tarr’s early years capture a feeling of claustrophobia; the characters’ lives are closing in on them at a rapid pace.

Tarr’s fourth feature, Almanac of Fall (1985), marks a transition. While also tackling social issues, its stylized color, lighting, and camera work demonstrate a shift away from the documentary style and a growing interest in form. . . .
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Related Links

A few words on Béla Tarr
http://blogs.walkerart.org/filmvideo/2007/09/03/words-bela-tarr/
Walker blogs, Film / Video: Walker Film


 
Malév