“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. . . .
“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. His partner,
editor, and sometimes codirector, Ágnes Hranitzky, admits that after
the first three films, “We wanted to do more poetic things.” Tarr adds,
“In the beginning, we were just talking about social conflicts, and
then we were opening, opening, opening. Now we had to show the
landscape and the time.” This radical shift in the balance between
content and style yielded films that are “specifically (and
exquisitely) cinematic, revealing Tarr to be a master stylist,” as
Chicago Reader critic Jonathan Rosenbaum once put it.
The films in this second stage of Tarr’s career—
Damnation (1988),
Satantango (1994), and
Werckmeister Harmonies
(2000), all collaborations with writer László Krasznahorkai—make for an
exhilarating cinematic experience. They are atmospherically charged,
fueled by vast wasteland landscapes filmed in long takes. Tarr’s
gorgeously choreographed shots inevitably draw you in, making you
complicit in the moral complexity on screen. As New York Times critic
Manohla Dargis said, “There are moments when watching one of Mr. Tarr’s
films that it seems as if he doesn’t just want you to look at his
images, but to somehow enter into them alongside the characters.” These
films, with their hauntingly beautiful scores and landscapes and rich
psychological inquiries, are best experienced on the cinema screen.
This glimpse into the world of Béla Tarr—via a rare and complete 35mm
feature film retrospective—promises a journey that follows the rhythms
of life with, according to Van Sant, “one of the few genuinely
visionary filmmakers.”
This program is made possible by generous support from Regis Foundation.close full text