Thursday 10 February 2011

Damnation

1988 Director Bela Tarr

Bela Tarr began his career making social realist domestic dramas, similar to the work of John Cassavettes. The feature before Damnation, Almanac of Fall, showed Tarr moving toward a more visually stylized form of filmmaking. With Damnation, the first of his collaborations with novelist Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Tarr adopts a formally rigorous style, featuring long takes and slow tracking shots of the bleak landscape that surrounds the characters.

Shot in black-and-white, Damnation tells the story of a depressed man in love with a married woman who sings at the local bar. She dreams of becoming famous, but she herself embodies all of his hopes and dreams. He is offered smuggling work by the bartender but eventually decides to offer the job to the singer's husband. This gets the husband out of the way for a while, but things don't go as he plans. There's a big, drunken dance, which everyone in town attends. Afterwards, one betrayal falls upon another, leaving him in despair, alienated from all of humanity.

This film laid the groundwork for Tarr's next collaboration with Krasznahorkai, Satantango, a seven-hour film which they spent years developing, and which many consider Tarr's masterpiece.

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