Satantango

Posted by Notcot on May 11, 2010 in Cult Film |

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (11 Reviews)

Satantango

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5 Comments

Phoust
at 12:32 am

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.

Rating: 5 / 5


 
HJ
at 1:22 am

A collective farm in disarray. A messianic agitator. And lots of mud & rain. Yes, it’s the infamous 7 hour movie, all in Bela Tarr’s trademark style: arty black & white cinematography, long slow takes, tracking shots & zooms. The style recalls Tarkovsky but the sensibility is completely different – relentlessly downbeat, squalid & cynical, a bit like Aki Kaurismaki without the jokes. So you get a doctor drinking himself to death, a cat being tortured & a suicidal little girl taking rat poison – all depicted in slow real time takes. It’s uncomfortable viewing not because it’s boring but because it gets almost too intense.

This is definitely film making of the highest order with stunning images & a very clever interlocking narrative structure, but I found Satantango harder going than his earlier film Damnation. That film had a more focused setting, plot & characterisation whereas Satantango is rather weighed down with enigmatic surrealism & allegorical overtones. I hesitate to recommend Satantango – various criticisms could be levelled at the film & it is certainly not for the uninitiated, but if you know Bela Tarr’s work (particularly if you enjoyed Werckmeister Harmonies) or have an interest in good old European art house cinema then you should get this DVD – it’s a unique film for sure.

(Nice to see some of the other Amazon reviews here are complaining that the film is too short!)
Rating: 4 / 5


 
Repulsine Klimator
at 3:24 am

I once went on a search for the longest film ever released and i stumbled upon this. At 7.5hours long it fitted the bill it’s also black and white and in Hungarian.

So i bought it purely because it was 7.5hrs long, b&w and Hungarian. I just wanted to see if i could, i had no idea what the film was going to be like.

Once it arrived i waited until the mood was right to sit/lay down and watch as much as i could in one sitting. I was half expecting it to be some philosophical arty bull**** of a film, however, the film just sucked me in from the moment it started.

The imagery, characters and long shots are unlike anything else i’ve seen on film before. In short the film is stunning, it’s not complicated, difficult to follow or arty farty film art house stuff. I watch at least once year during the winter when i have a cold or cant be bothered to get out of bed.

I’m proud to have this in my collection, It’s a film that Hollywood cannot touch, it can never be remade into a 1.5hr abortion starring Nicolas Cage or some other so called ‘actor’.

Satantango is one film that truly deserves the hype.

The funny thing is the dvd cover isn’t plastered with “masterpiece” or “stunning” or other choice picked words from reviews that you’ve never read. Just as the Bible isn’t plastered with “great read” or “epic life changing stories” or “based on a true events” all over it’s cover nor should this be.

If you’ve read it this far then thanks for reading.
Rating: 5 / 5


 
Mr. D. J. ODRISCOLL
at 4:03 am

I think that David’s title sums up my feeling about this film. It is one to watch over and over. The length of it may appear daunting but by the end of it I felt that it was not long enough.

The plot is simple enough: group of people on a run-down collective get swindled out of their livlihood. But it is the drama and the intricacies of the lkives that make this fil so watchable.

Bela Tarr creates some of the most memorble scenes, not least the long tracking shots.

The comparison with Tarkovsky is lazy thinking. Tarr is an unique film maker (as was Tarkovsky). There is nothing quite like Satantango in any field of the arts (just as there is nothing like any Tarkovsky film) and much the same can be said of his other films that and especiall those on the three DVD set The Bela Tarr Collection [DVD] which is a must for any serios film buff.

This is an outstanding achievement and a testimony to the genious of Bela tarr.
Rating: 5 / 5


 
david ruane
at 5:56 am

Just incredible, it touches something deep within. There are moments in this film that are incredibly painful to watch, particularly involving the young child but in the end somehow you feel closer to the pain and the beauty of what it is to be human. It is an absolute masterpiece of cinema and poetry. If a film last 7 hours and you want to watch it all again to immerse yourself in what it says and somehow feel you understand life more then it is doing something beyond words and beyond cinema.
Rating: 5 / 5


 

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