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"The Films Of Sergei Paradjanov," "El Cid"

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  • "The Films Of Sergei Paradjanov," "El Cid"

    "THE FILMS OF SERGEI PARADJANOV," "EL CID"
    By Michael Atkinson

    IFC
    http://ifc.com/news/article?aId=22112
    Feb 11 2008

    [Photo: "The Color of Pomegranates," part of "The Films of Sergei
    Paradjanov," Kino Video, 2008]

    A summoning of pagan energies if ever there were any in the era of
    television, the major features of Sergei Paradjanov have maintained
    a flabbergasting constancy in the Western filmhead cosmos - these
    prehistoric, narratively congealed Central Asian mutants have never
    been out of circulation in this country, as retro-able prints or video
    editions, and are now all available on DVD from Kino in newly restored
    versions, including, for the first time, his epochal international
    debut, "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors" (1964). It's intensely odd,
    because Paradjanov is one of the most hermetic, arcane and completely
    original artists in cinema history, and his films do not resemble those
    made anywhere else, by anyone. Perhaps their sui generis freakiness
    is their saving grace - and thus a sign of hope for the survival of
    adventurous film culture in this country. It's not too much to say
    that no effort at understanding the outer reaches of filmic sorcery
    can be complete without a confrontation with Paradjanov's world -
    a timeless meta-past of living icons, bristling fairy tale tableaux,
    stylistic extremities and culture shock.

    Paradjanov was Georgian-Armenian by birth, cursed by fate to make
    films within a Soviet system that condemned him as a decadent
    and a "surrealist." He spent time in the gulag (released thanks
    to international outcry in 1978), but the Politburo wasn't wrong;
    Paradjanov was nothing if not a catapulting folklorist, recreating
    the primitive pre-Soviet era as it might've been dreamt of in the
    opium-befogged skull of Omar Khayyam. There could hardly have been a
    more oppositive reply to Socialist Realism. The films - "Shadows,"
    "The Color of Pomegranates" (1969), "The Legend of Suram Fortress"
    (1984) and "Ashik Kerib" (1988) - are all based on folk tales and
    ancient history (Ukranian, Armenian and Georgian), but only "Shadows"
    is centered on narrative. It's also the most visually dynamic;
    unfolding a tribal tale of star-crossed love and familial vengeance
    in the Carpathian mountains, the movie is one of the most restless
    and explosive pieces of camerawork from the so-called Art Film era,
    shot in authentic outlands with distorting lenses and superhuman
    capacity, and imbued with a grainy, primal grit.

    Utterly convincing as a manifestation of pre-civilized will and
    superstition, "Shadows" was still only a suggestion of the netherworlds
    Paradjanov would then call home. The next three films, separated by
    years of censorship battling and imprisonment, are barely narratives
    at all, but rather medieval art and life conjured up as a lurid,
    iconic, wax museum image parade, bursting with native art, doves,
    peacocks, Byzantine design, brass work, hookahs, ancient ritual,
    cathedral filigree, symbolic surrealities, ad infinitum. This is
    not a universe where quantities like acting and pace are issues;
    Paradjanov's vision can be read as the dynamiting of an entire
    cultural store closet of things. "Pomegranates" traipses through
    the life of 18th-century Armenian poet Sayat Nova, "Fortress"
    revives an age-old Georgian war legend and "Ashik Kerib" adapts an
    "Arabian Nights"-style tale retold by Mikhail Lermontov. Together,
    they represent one of the most unique usages cinema has ever been put
    to, employing the full range of native textures (scrambling Russian
    traditionalism with Turkish, Arabic, Indian, Chinese and Rom) and
    ending up, for all of their stasis and ornate compositions, with a
    party-hearty-Marty celebration of traditional culture and life in the
    unruly wilderness of Asian societies rarely if ever visible to American
    filmgoers. The four DVDs come with an array of background/profile docs,
    an impressionistic portrait comparing/contrasting Paradjanov with buddy
    Andrei Tarkovsky, and, best of all, several rare Paradjanov shorts.

    Light years away, medieval historicism in Hollywood gained substantial
    gravity by 1961, when producer Samuel Bronston and director Anthony
    Mann relocated what must've been a majority of Italian film laborers
    to Spain to make "El Cid," and struggled to give the monster a sense
    of Old World veracity while so many Cinemascope epics of the day
    settled for studio lot interiors.

    Appearing finally on DVD in a nostalgic gift box equipped with
    lobby card and comic book reprints, Mann's film has long been the
    quixotic favorite of David Thomson and Martin Scorsese, who provides
    an introductory essay. True enough - despite its genre-monolithic
    stiffness and starchy period dialogue, "El Cid" is a muscular,
    sometimes strangely disturbing historical launch, fashioned by
    Hollywood's greatest landscape painter into a menacing examination
    of class struggle and honor-bound tragedy. The portrayal of invading
    Muslim Moors and the ostensibly Christian Spanish royalty are both
    equally venal, Charlton Heston does the axiomatic job only certain
    movie stars can do (riding out, dead but strapped to his horse,
    along a beach that foretells the climax of "Planet of the Apes,"
    seven years later), Sophia Loren looks so impossibly beautiful that
    her face seems on the verge of orchid blooming, and the crowds - all
    real, all occupying Mann's ancient Iberian horizons in a tangible way
    that digital hordes cannot - march and rampage. But mostly the movie
    is an essay on landscape's colossal indifference to man, as are so
    many of Mann's films, an eloquent and impressive perspective with
    which heroic sagas are rarely blessed.

    "The Films of Sergei Paradjanov" (Kino Video) and "El Cid" (Miriam
    Collection) are both now available on DVD.
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