How about making a photo display?

Alyson 2022-02-07 14:58:33

This movie is really the polyphony of insomniacs. I was once again convinced that I had never read the first trilogy. When I watched the Russian Ark, I was directed at the 100-minute scene. What about Tarkovsky? How about seeing Anzhe? It turned out that there were a lot of people around the master, but this time he fell asleep again. I really admire the perseverance of the judges. I think this film can be cut into pictures and displayed in the art gallery for people to watch (saying There may be unexpected effects), there is no need to use the camera to torture the audience for 120 minutes, and it is not good to get an illustrated script?

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Extended Reading
  • Hank 2022-03-14 14:12:30

    The final chapter of Sokolov's "Power of Man" four-part series, similar to several other Faust adaptation films, only chooses the first [Faust] (the love tragedy with Gretchen) as the main line, but There are many differences from the original, such as Faust, who has noble and transcendental pursuits, but reduced to begging the devil to let him spend the night with her, and thus signed a contract, but the ending is still agitated and high: the prayer of repentance (also directly To quote Martin Luther), tear up the contract, kill the devil, and forge ahead into the distance. Faust's father, Gretchen's mother, Wagner, and Valentine also have significant changes. The audio-visual style is prominent, and the academic frame is combined with the sometimes distorted and deformed figures, as well as the oblique composition, which is extremely depressing and cramped. The streets and villages are covered with gray-yellow filters, the dens and taverns are dark and stagnant, everything is crowded, dirty and corrupt, only the church is a blue and white world, and the forest and boudoir are green filters. A close-up of Gretchen with soft light highlights. Erratic and manic multiple dialogue tracks. Devil deformed old body. Good and evil, beauty and ugliness, spirit/form and body/matter are so strangely mixed together. (8.0/10)

  • Renee 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    Goethe: "The unhappy man is dangerous."