The Color of Pomegranates (1969)Directed by Sergei ParajanovDoomsy’s Rating: 92/100 (on m
The Color of Pomegranates (1969)Directed by Sergei ParajanovDoomsy’s Rating: 92/100 (on my Great Films list!)Serving as an amazing double feature with Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, Sergei Parajanov’s untouchable art-house masterwork The Color of Pomegranates is a one-of-a-kind experience that is an absolute visual feast from start to finish. The film is based on the life of Armenian poet Sayat-Nova, and is told through in a series of tableau set-pieces of rich symbolism and psychedelic mise-en-scene manipulation. A clear influence on several prominent pieces of modern media (namely the music videos for R.E.M.’s “Losing My Religion” and Lady Gaga’s “911″), this is a spoonfeeding of the Armenian oral tradition and its glorious cultural history. Although heavily censored by the Soviet Union against the wishes of Parajanov, likely for its less-than-flattering subtext about the occupation of the Soviets, the film remains a transcendent and enchanting journey through a culture never seen before on film. The use of color, so exquisite in its breadth, is nearly kaleidoscopic and wholly unforgettable. There is a certain patience required for a film like this, as its not a film that is best served in narrative terms, but that should not deter anyone from such an enigmatic and beautiful work. If you like your films a little impenetrable and mysterious, this is a tone poem for the ages. Watched on Criterion Channel. -- source link
Tumblr Blog : film-masochisme.tumblr.com
#filmreview#great movie#psychedelic film#surrealist film#surrealism#armenia#criterion#art film#art house#oral tradition#poetry#visual poetry#trippy#sergei parajanov#cinema#movies#filmblr#filmmaking