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DVD Review: Shadows Of Forgotten Ancestors

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  • DVD Review: Shadows Of Forgotten Ancestors

    DVD REVIEW: SHADOWS OF FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS
    By Richard von Busack

    Silicon Valley's Metro
    http://www.metroactive.com/metro/01.30.08/dv d-forgotten-0805.html
    Jan 30 2008
    CA

    Soviet-Armenian director Sergei Paradjanov's 1964 masterpiece of
    life in the Carpathian Mountains, "forgotten by God and people,"
    tells the story, somewhere in the past, of the peasant Ivan (Ivan
    Mikolajchuk), who loses the love of his life, wanders in exile and
    participates in celebrations and lamentations. Eventually, Ivan marries
    a bright-eyed, faithless villager (Tatiana Bestayeva) who cannot lure
    him back from the ghostly appeal of the woman he lost. The Georgian
    filmmaker's extraordinary sensuality combines the dreaminess of Vigo
    with the feeling for the natural world of Herzog. Yet this director
    was alone in innovation and Jungian power. Fawns and lambs, horses
    and fires, eggs and apples, storms and streams-all are contemplated
    with a morning-of-creation awe. Some of the ideas here turn up in
    the modern cinema: the mysterious log barge coursing down a river
    in the fog as its crew looks for a dead woman is all over Apocalypse
    Now; a tree bursting into flames to symbolize orgasm can be seen in
    Pleasantville. Kino's print of this much-mutilated film is very good,
    if not visually restored, and includes scenes that didn't make it
    onto earlier video issues. The coming attractions include the good
    news that Paradjanov's The Legend of the Suram Fortress is also being
    reissued by Kino. A slideshow of the director's fine art is beautiful
    as it is enlightening; less so is the underwhelming 2002 documentary
    Islands, comparing the career of Paradjanov with that of his great
    friend Andrei Tarkovsky (Solaris, Andrei Rublev). Out-of-context
    film clips try to illustrate both artists' sufferings at the hands
    of Soviet censors and judges. In Paradjanov's case, they knew who
    they were after-Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors is perhaps the least
    Soviet movie ever made in the U.S.S.R. (Richard von Busack)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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