Tommaso wrote:
Good to hear that, because I only heard unaninimous praise for it and then found it pretty disappointing when I finally saw it. I guess I'm a bit averse to what appears as a technical tour de force for its own sake (I have the same problem with Hitchcock's "Rope").
Well, I'd disagree that it's "a technical tour de force for its own sake", because Sokurov's ambition had rather greater justification than Hitchcock's - he wanted to capture the sweep of Russian history in a single shot (or "a single breath", as he put it). So while you could have shot
Rope in the usual way, and it would doubtless have worked perfectly well, the one-take nature of
Russian Ark was the wellspring from which the entire film flowed, along with its unique and unmatchable location.
Quote:
But I admit of not knowing too much about Russian history and will surely give it a try again at a later date, because at least the visuals were pretty amazing for the most part.
I was incredibly lucky when I saw it - it was early 2003, and I'd spent a ten-day leg of my honeymoon in St Petersburg in November 2002, during which I read two hefty books on Russian history from the city's perspective.
Which didn't exactly make me an expert, but it did turn out to equip me very well for the film, not least because I quickly recognised that Sokurov was deliberately mocking the less-informed viewer by having the unseen commentator mention historical figures fractionally too late - "Was that Pushkin?", after Pushkin has already disappeared. Those who know their Russian history and culture would of course have recognised Pushkin from the off.
So the bottom line is that the less you know about Russian history, the less you're going to get out of it - Sokurov clearly made the film primarily for highly-educated Russians like himself.
Apparently one of the DVDs has a commentary, though I don't know how helpful it is (I've heard it's largely technical), and the Artificial Eye disc is commentary-free.