Twitter Google Share on Facebook Tarkovsky Thesaurus Encyclopedia Wikipedia (Russianˈtɑkɔfskij) n (Biography)Andrei(ˈɑndrej). 1932–86, Soviet film director, whose films includeAndrei Rublev(1966),Solaris(1971),Nostalgia(1983), andThe Sacrifice(1986) ...
Tarkovsky AndreiProust MarcelSzymański,Karol
The ample bonus materials forMirrorare spread across two Blu-ray discs. On the first is the documentaryAndrei Tarkovsky: A Cinema Prayer, assembled by the director’s son. It’s a thought-provoking, career-spanning retrospective that provides lots of behind-the-scenes footage and photos of Tark...
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The Mirror is a 1975 Russian film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky. It is loosely autobiographical, blending childhood memories, newsreel footage and poems by his father Arseny...
After all, I finished bothMetrobooks and found them worth reading. Hints of the films of Tarkovsky, hints ofRoadside Picnic, a whole heap of zombie-type tropes and I think I mentioned the monsters. It’s not as if some of my favourite books have altogether-reasonable characters. Maybe beca...
1084 Mirror Andrei Tarkovsky Soviet Union, 1975 Les misérables Raymond Bernard France, 1934 432 Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters Paul Schrader United States, 1985 449 Missing Costa-Gavras United States, 1982 1127 Mississippi Masala Mira Nair United States, 1991 416 Miss Julie Alf Sjöber...
This article explores Tarkovsky's Mirror – as a film overtly concerned with the idea of a problematic sense of self – in light of Lacan's theory. Mixing childhood memories of the director's mother with the poetry of his father, Arsennii Tarkovsky, the film presents the attempts of a ...
the camera (perhaps supplying Ivan’s POV) runs smack into its blackened bole. Significantly, this image turns up again at the end of Tarkovsky’s final filmThe Sacrifice, where (as it does here) it emblematizes what J. Hoberman described as “the only crucifix appropriate to this blasted ...
“Contempt,”“Pierrot le fou,”“Histoire(s) du cinema”). Followed by: Carl Theodor Dreyer (“The Passion of Joan of Arc,”“Ordet,”“Gertrud”), Francis Ford Coppola (“Apocalypse Now,”“The Godfather,”“The Godfather Part II”), Andrei Tarkovsky (“Andrei Rublev,”“Mirror,”“...
If you’re hungry for a great piece of contemporary Russian sci-fi horror (i.e., something not directed by either Andrei Tarkovsky or Yakov Protazanov), then Egor Abramenko’s 2020 directorial debut is just the film you’re looking for. ...