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Andrei Rublev (The Criterion Collection) by…
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Andrei Rublev (The Criterion Collection) (original 1966; edition 1999)

by Andrei Tarkovsky (Director), Vadim Yusov (Cinematographer), Andrei Tarkovsky (Writer), Lyudmila Feyginova (Editor), Olga Shevkunenko (Editor)8 more, Tatyana Egorycheva (Editor), Tamara Ogorodnikova (Producer), Andrey Konchalovskiy (Writer), Anatoliy Solonitsyn (Actor), Ivan Lapikov (Actor), Nikolay Grinko (Actor), Nikolay Sergeev (Actor), Irina Tarkovskaya (Actor)

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1043279,273 (4.29)3
Story of the famed 15th century icon painter who survives the cruelties of medieval Russia and creates works of art.
Member:DDDIII
Title:Andrei Rublev (The Criterion Collection)
Authors:Andrei Tarkovsky (Director)
Other authors:Vadim Yusov (Cinematographer), Andrei Tarkovsky (Writer), Lyudmila Feyginova (Editor), Olga Shevkunenko (Editor), Tatyana Egorycheva (Editor)7 more, Tamara Ogorodnikova (Producer), Andrey Konchalovskiy (Writer), Anatoliy Solonitsyn (Actor), Ivan Lapikov (Actor), Nikolay Grinko (Actor), Nikolay Sergeev (Actor), Irina Tarkovskaya (Actor)
Info:Criterion (1999), Edition: The Criterion Collection
Collections:Icons
Rating:
Tags:None

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Andrei Rublev [1966 film] by Andrei Tarkovsky (Director) (1966)

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Every Orthodox Christian should watch this award-winning film about the famous Russian iconographer Andrei Rublev and the struggles he faced. ****Note on the DVD cover: On the first menu, choose “English.” On the next menu select “Dubbing.” Then, if you don’t want French audio on top of the Russian, choose “Russian 5.1.” Then select the language in which you wish the subtitles to appear. Finally select “Play.”**** ( )
  sagocreno | Jul 12, 2018 |
Andrei Rublev (alternately transliterated as Andrei Rublyov) is an epic film created by the Soviet-era director, Andrei Tarkovsky. It was financed and created during a brief cultural thaw in East-West relations, marked by the end of Kruschchev's reign. Within reason, the 205 minute director's cut represents exactly what Tarkovsky wanted in the movie. Unfortunately for Tarkovsky and for us, Kruschev was deposed shortly after filming began, and the 205 minute version was not seen until twenty five years after its creation. The Breszhnev-era censors first trimmed 15 minutes from it, then censors and marketers trimmed more. The shortest known version has been truncated to 145 minutes. Even more sadly, Tarkovsky was never again to get approval for the projects he really wanted to film, or an adequate budget to film the ones that did get approved.

Fortunately for us, this movie, recently rereleased in a DVD transferred from a pristine 35mm print, may now be viewed intact, and it is one of the great triumphs of mankind's stay on the planet. It is a masterpiece almost without flaw. The beautiful painterly images follow one another in breathtaking succession. At least three of the eight chapters, if taken individually, could stand alone as separate masterpieces.

The ostensible subject is the life of Andrei Rublev, a 15th century monk who is renowned as Russia's greatest creator of religious icons and frescoes. Rublev himself, however, is merely a useful device. Little is known about him, and most of the episodes in the movie come straight from Tarkovsky's imagination of what might have been. Sometimes one must ignore the facts to get to the truth.

The movie is not about one talented monk, but about Russia, and Rublev stands in as a useful symbol since he lived in a time when he could personally witness two of the key elements in the development of Russia's unique culture: the growing force of Byzantine Christianity, and the Mongol-Tatar invasions. In addition he was an artist and a thinker, and experienced first-hand the difficulty of following those paths in Russia. Rublev's own inner conflicts allow the filmmaker to illuminate thoughts on the pagan and the sacred, the nature of art, the relationship of the artist to the state, what it means to be Russian, and what it means to be human.

It is beautiful, mystical, and profound, but the truly inspiring aesthetics are matched with complete technical wizardry. I simply don't know how some of the shots were created. One I do understand, and stand in awe of, is a continuous single camera shot, just before the church door is breached by Tatar invaders, which involves action in several different locations at multiple elevations as well as the correct timing of hundreds of extras and horses. It makes the first scene of Touch of Evil look like a high school film project.

It is a difficult movie to follow. One might liken it to James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake as a work of genius so monumental and complex, and so disdainful of traditional narrative form, that it requires extensive thought and study to understand it. And even after studying it, watching it repeatedly, and reading Tarkovsky's own comments about it, one still finds it opaque in many ways.

Tarkovsky was free to create the work of art he wanted, without concern for profit. The original 205 minute cut was also free from outside censorship. He used this freedom to realize his personal artistic vision. There is no other movie like it, and there may never be. Score it 11 out of 10.
(2 discs)
1 vote Asko_Tolonen | May 15, 2017 |
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Tarkovsky, AndreiDirectorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Konchalovskiy, AndreyWritermain authorall editionsconfirmed
Grinko, NikolayActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Lapikov, IvanActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Ogorodnikova, TamaraProducersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Ovchinnikov, ViacheslavComposersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Raush, IrmaActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Sergeev, NikolayActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Solonitsyn, AnatoliyActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Yusov, VadimCinematographersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed

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