Sunday, April 17, 2022
Watching Tarkovsky’s ‘Stalker’ Again
From the outside world...
The surreal sci fi masterpiece, 'Stalker', directed by Andrei Tarkovsky, tells a jarring, dislocated story of a mysterious zone, inside which the normal laws of nature no longer apply. Guarded by a military force, the zone is occasionally penetrated by renegade guides, or 'stalkers', who will bring adventurers with them for a price.
The 1979 film is loosely based on a Russian sci fi short story, 'Roadside Picnic', which describes superior alien beings who halt briefly on Earth, en route to somewhere or something else. The trash or detritus from their brief roadside picnic, is utterly mesmerizing to earthlings, and causes strange zones on the planet, inside which the alien discardings upend the laws of physics.
...to inside the Zone...
I'm probably a Philistine, but I almost wanted there to be more action in this slowly-unfolding story, ...and for once a remake might be a compelling project....
"Was it a meteorite or a visitation from outer space?
Whatever it was, in our small country, there appeared a miracle — the Zone.
We sent in troops. Not one returned.
Then we surrounded the Zone with a security cordon.
We did right... Although I'm not sure. I'm not sure."
Whatever it was, in our small country, there appeared a miracle — the Zone.
We sent in troops. Not one returned.
Then we surrounded the Zone with a security cordon.
We did right... Although I'm not sure. I'm not sure."
Fabian, or Going to the Dogs
Tom Schilling stars as Jakob Fabian in "Fabian, or Going to the Dogs" (2021).
"Despite it all, life was a most interesting occupation" ~ adopted from Erich Kastner's novel, "Fabian" tells the story of earnest writer and man about town, Jakob Fabian, in late Weimar Berlin. Through a turbulent relationship with a rising film star, his friendship with a rich, idealistic young intellectual, Fabian's tragedy is seen against the larger tragedy of Berlin and Germany, on the slide towards Nazism.