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DVD Releases: 'The Colour Of Pomegranates' (Re-Release)

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  • DVD Releases: 'The Colour Of Pomegranates' (Re-Release)

    DVD RELEASES: 'THE COLOUR OF POMEGRANATES' (RE-RELEASE)
    Joe Walsh

    Cine-Vue
    http://www.cine-vue.com/2011/08/dvd-releases-colour-of-pomegranates-re.html
    Aug 29, 2011

    Armenian director Sergi Paradjanov's The Colour of Pomegranates
    (1968), starring Sofiko Chiaureli, is not what you would call a
    traditionally entertaining film. A more appropriate set of terms
    would be, intriguing, intelligent and challenging. The film does not
    possess a conventional plot, although it loosely follows the life of
    19th Century Armenian bard Sagat Nova.

    The Colour of Pomegranates is a metaphysical, surrealist exploration
    of the poets mind and works. Interestingly the film was made as
    part of the 200th anniversary of Nova's birth in 1969 and received
    Soviet backing.

    Potential viewers should be warned that this is a film that you have
    to dedicate yourself to. I would however argue that if you engage with
    the film on its own terms you will be richly rewarded and accept that
    you may need to watch the film more than once to come to terms with it.

    The Colour of Pomegranates is divided into eight chapters, or
    tableaux's, that take the viewer on a journey through the three
    stages of Nova's life. The film, rather unsurprisingly from the title,
    exploits the use of vibrant colour. One of the most beautiful scenes
    can be viewed early on when pomegranate juice bleeds through a rich
    cream cloth. Throughout the film Paradjanov compares and contrasts
    colour to create magnificent, rich scenes.

    Distinctive to Paradjanov is his understanding of objects and their
    relationship to one another. Paradjanov belonged to a group of Eastern
    European directors who experimented with 'Poetic Cinema,' this form
    of cinema replaces words with striking images creating a language
    unique to film but equally (if not more so) informative. It makes
    a huge amount of sense that Paradjanov was attracted to the subject
    of Sagat Nova as it provided an opportunity to experiment with the
    relationship of literature to film.

    Paradjanov also stressed that whilst The Colour of Pomegranates is an
    unconventional biography of Nova it was also largely autobiographical.

    In fact Sofiko Chiaureli who plays several roles throughout the film
    that cross genders including that of Nova, provides not only a dream
    like quality to the film but reflects Parajanov's sexual identity; he
    was imprisoned for homosexual acts with a KGB agent in the early 60's.

    Paradjanov like to experiment with mime and theatre in his work and
    this is clearly evident from watching The Colour of Pomegranates.

    Theatrical devices are exploited again and again to weave together
    elements that reoccur throughout the eight chapters. In the end
    the result is a magnificent surrealist dream that throws you into a
    tapestry of ideas that emerge from both Paradjanov and Nova's life
    and works.

    The Colour of Pomegranates is a true masterpiece of cinema that
    takes the concept of the biographical film one leap further and is a
    work that stands the test of time being as fresh as the year it was
    released forty-two years ago.

    The version of The Colour of Pomegranates available on this DVD is the
    Russian edit, featuring Russian language in the dividing chapters. The
    other version is known as the Armenian edit, neither can claim to be
    the director's cut, the production story, which is too complex to go
    into in this review, is fascinating and can be explored in the DVD's
    special features.

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