Showing posts with label wong kar wai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wong kar wai. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2019

THE SCHOOL OF TARKOVSKY PART 24: MOVING IMAGERY

We took a little break from this but we're back looking at some of the visual similarities between Tarkovsky and filmmakers ranging from Claire Denis to Shane Carruth.

Enjoy

Nostalghia / The Intruder 

Andrei Rublev / Hana-Bi

The Mirror / Annihilation

The Mirror / Midsommar 

The Mirror / Midsommar

Sacrifices / Midsommar

The Mirror / The Neverending Story

Stalker / Archipelago

Ivan's Childhood / Pierrot Le Fou


Solaris / Upstream Color

The Sacrifice / Tree Of Life

Stalker  / Morvern Callar


Solaris /
Safe

Solaris / Taste Of Cement

Solaris / Happy Together




Friday, March 1, 2019

THE SCHOOL OF GODARD PART 3: MOVING IMAGERY

From the regular culprits (Jarmusch & Hal Hartley) to not-so familiar faces (Charlie Ahearn), we take another look at Godard's (POSSIBLE) influence on modern cinema.

Enjoy...


I admire Jean-Luc Godard and I think it's impossible today for anyone making cinema to escape from his influence - Hal Hartley
Masculin Feminin / The Book Of Life


New York Times: Was your own filmmaking influenced by Godard?

Jim Jarmusch: Certainly. “Breathless” was really inspiring to me formally. With that one, he didn’t have enough money to shoot a film with sound. It’s all dubbed after the fact, so he could go out on the street and just shoot in a guerrilla style, which is how I started out. And he used jump-cutting to facilitate the ability to edit something out of whatever he shot.
Masculin Feminin / Permanent Vacation

Masculin Feminin

King Of New York / Contempt

Band Of Outsiders / Cold War


Godard, Fellini and Bergman were my heroes - David Lynch
Vivre Sa Vie / Inland Empire

Vivre Sa Vie / Mister Lonely

Weekend /
Synecdoche New York

A Married Woman / The Best Day Of My Life

Contempt / Belle Du Jour / King Of New York


I think the only people who really experienced film are people like Jean-Luc Godard, you know? He really experienced the texture - Claire Denis
A Married Woman / Trouble Every Day

Vivre Sa Vie / Inland Empire

Breathless / Chungking Express

First Name Carmen / Our Time

First Name Carmen / Revanche

Breathless / Kreutzer Sonata

Friday, November 23, 2018

THE SCHOOL OF TARKOVSKY PART 20: MOVING IMAGERY

I keep thinking I've run out of comparisons to the films of Tarkovsky but here we are.

Enjoy...

The Sacrifice / Broken Flowers

Andrei Rublev / Broken Flowers


Solaris / Fallen Angels


The sleeping family...
Stalker / Poltergeist 

The Sacrifice / Sonatine

Given Lars Von Trier's fascination with Tarkovsky early on in his career, I'm convinced the ending of his student film; Image Of Relief was a reference to the opening scene of Ivan's Childhood...
Rising figures in Ivan's Childhood & Image Of Relief


Ivan's Childhood /
Come & See


Solaris / Claire Dolan

Again - not only did Alexander Sokurov know Tarkovsky personally, but he has openly praised his work and sited him as an influence since the start of his career so I'm willing to bet this comparison below is pretty on point...
Solaris / Mother & Son

Stalker / Annihilation

Solaris / Miami Vice


and more Malick/Tarkovsky comparisons...
Ivan's Childhood /
Tree Of Life

Ivan's Childhood / The New World


The Mirror / Fire Walk With Me


Ivan's Childhood / The Spirit Of The Beehive
Solaris / Morvern Callar
The Mirror / The Turin Horse

Friday, September 22, 2017

THE SCHOOL OF TARKOVSKY PART 10

We're back! In this installment of The School Of Tarkovsky we're going to look at some more comparisons that slipped through the cracks in these last few months. If you follow me on twitter then some of these will look familiar. But for those of you who do not - here are some additional comparisons/visual similarities from regular students of Tarkovsky like Carlos Reygadas & Nuri Bilge Ceylan along with unexpected filmmakers like Wong Kar Wai & Barry Jenkins.

While some of these comparisons are in fact totally coincidental (which still doesn’t take away from how cool they look next to each other), you have to understand the connections that some of these have with one another. You aren’t required to know the backgrounds of these images and/or the filmmakers responsible for them but if you feel the need to negatively & cynically question Tarkovky’s influence (like some do on various forms of social media), at least know what the fuck you’re talking about. The more people question some of these comparisons the more they just confirm that they don’t read about cinema very much. I understand that some of this pushback comes from the assumption that I’m calling their favorite filmmakers “copycats” when that isn’t the case (there are only so many original images & ideas in film. You could trace the majority of modern cinema's visual influences back to the work of early Bunuel, Epstein & Cocteau).
I’m not always talking out of my ass when I compare films. Especially in the case of Andrei Tarkovsky. I don’t mean to repeat myself but some of the regular filmmakers who pop up in this series are folks like Carlos Reygadas, Lars Von Trier, Claire Denis, Elem Klimov & Alexander Sokurov. When Carlos Reygadas first stepped on the scene with his first two films (Japon & Battle In Heaven), can you honestly say to yourself that he didn’t bring up Andrei Tarkovsky any chance he got when being interviewed? Not only that, but in the special features of Japon he goes out of his way to praise Tarkovsky. Given those two facts, is it so far-fetched to think that he wouldn’t reference Tarkovsky in his work (see below along just about every other entry in this series)?
Lars Von Trier not only dedicated some of his work to Tarkovsky but he also once said that he wanted to be Andrei Tarkovsky early on in his career (he also name-dropped Tarkovsky more than once at a video Q&A at the IFC Center back in 2006 where I was in attendance).

I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again – Claire Denis worked on Tarkovsky’s Sacrifice. While that doesn’t guarantee that his influence rubbed off on her, the connection between Denis & Tarkovsky is still there on some level.

Is it out of line that Alexander Sokurov would draw inspiration from the films of his personal friend Andrei Tarkovsky?

I always find it funny when filmmakers rummage through the criterion collection closet praising the films that influenced them or talk about the scenes they “ripped off” on a DVD commentary track (see/listen to any early Paul Thomas Anderson commentary track) but when someone (…me) shows the influence they speak of, suddenly everyone goes; “whoa whoa whoa! That’s pretty vague, man! You could find those images in any movie!” It really makes no sense to me.

Speaking of rummaging through criterion closets, look at Barry Jenkins who recently participated in the criterion closet series. Someone recently put together a lovely video analysis comparing Moonlight with the films of Wong Kar Wai (many people are ripping it off as their own work) which he co-signed and endorsed. It should also be noted that Mr. Jenkins took joy in a few of my own movie comparisons as well…


Given Barry Jenkins' obvious love of cinema, is it really too far-fetched to think that a Tarkovsky film rubbed off on him in some way (see the first image below)?

Solaris / Moonlight

I dedicated an entire entry comparing the work of Nuri Bilge Ceylan to Tarkovsky so when you see this Stalker/Uzak comparison, please don’t question me...
Stalker / Uzak

The horrors of war seen through the perspective of young Russian Protagonists who start out innocent & hopeful but by the end of the film they’ve aged psychologically (highlighted by scenes where you can see the aging all over their faces as they look directly in to the camera).
I don’t think it’s so out of line to compare these two movies. Do you?
Ivan's Childhood /  Come & See

The contrast of a fake/model house next to a real house burning to the ground...
Badlands / Sacrifice

This could be a reach but it still looks cool, doesn't it?
The Mirror / The Clouds Of Sils Maria

Ivan's Childhood / In The Mood For Love
There's nothing to debate here
Ivan's Childhood / The Revenant

again - nothing to debate...
Ivan's Childhood / Post Tenebras Lux

Ivan's Childhood / The Tree Of Life

The Mirror / The Thin Red Line

The Mirror / Silent Light

While Bertrand Bonello is more a student from the School of Bresson (he would have his actors watch Bresson films to prepare for their roles), it isn't too out of line to assume he was influenced by other filmmakers like Tarkovsky
Andrei Rublev / Tiresia



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