A conjuring of primeval-medieval culture if ever there were any in the era of television, the major features of Soviet filmmaker Sergei Paradjanov have
maintained a flabbergasting constancy in the Western filmhead cosmos these prehistoric, narratively congealed Central Asian mutants have never
been out of circulation in this country, as retro-able prints or video editions, and are now all available on DVD from Kino in newly restored versions,
including, for the first time on disc, his epochal international debut, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1964). It's intensely odd, because
Paradjanov is one of the most hermetic, arcane, completely original artists in cinema history, and his films do not resemble those made anywhere
else, by anyone. Perhaps their sui generis freakiness is their saving grace and thus a sign of hope for the survival of adventurous film culture in this
country. It's not too much to say that no effort at understanding the outer reaches of filmic sorcery can be complete without a confrontation with
Paradjanov's world, a timeless meta-past of living icons, bristling fairy tale tableaux, stylistic extremities, and retroactive culture shock.
Paradjanov was Georgian-Armenian by birth, cursed by fate to make films within a Soviet system that outlawed ancient culture and condemned him
as a decadent (he was an uncloseted gay man) and a "surrealist." He spent time in the gulag (released thanks to international outcry, in 1978), but
the Politburo wasn't entirely wrong; Paradjanov was nothing if not a catapulting folklorist, recreating the primitive pre-Soviet world as it might've been
dreamt of in the opium-befogged skull of Omar Khayyam. There could hardly have been a more thorough, more defiant reply to Socialist Realism, and
to proscribed Communist culture in general. Indeed, because Soviet culture was as much at war with the multi-ethnic past as it was with the capitalist
future, Paradjanov made other rebels within the system even metaphysicist Andrei Tarkovsky look positively socialist, or at least compliant, by
comparison.
The films Shadows, The Color of Pomegranates (1969), The Legend of Suram Fortress (1984) and Ashik Kerib (1988)
are all based on folk tales and ancient history (Ukrainian, Armenian, and Georgian), but only "Shadows" is centered on a progressive narrative. It's
also the most visually dynamic; unfolding a tribal tale of star-crossed love and familial vengeance in the Carpathian mountains, the movie is one of the
most restless and explosive pieces of camerawork from the so-called Art Film era, shot in authentic outlands with distorting lenses and superhuman
capacity, and imbued with a grainy, primal grit. (A seemingly handheld P.O.V. shot from the top of a falling tree in a crowded, snowy forest is just the
first of many breath-catchers.) Watching it is less like experiencing a form of entertainment-art than time travel, and afterwards you feel you know
something about Ukranian tribal existence its primitiveness, its music, its relationship with the terrain, its fear of magic you couldn't learn from a
book.
Utterly convincing as a manifestation of precivilized will and superstition, Shadows was still only a suggestion of the netherworlds Paradjanov would
then call home. The next three films, separated by years of censorship battling and imprisonment, are barely narratives at all, but rather Middle Ages
art and life conjured up as a lurid, iconic, wax-museum image parade, bursting with native craft, Byzantine design, brasswork, hookahs, doves,
peacocks, ancient ritual, cathedral filigree, symbolic surrealities, ghosts, ad infinitum. Paradjanov's signature image became the frieze-like
icon-tableau, often encompassing entire villages and landscapes, but arranged as if on an altar for a greedy god's pleasure. This is not a universe
where quantities like acting and pace are concerns; Paradjanov's vision can be read as the plundering of an entire cultural store closet of *things*,
disinterred and remembered for our materialistic modern eyes. Pomegranates traipses through the life of 18th-century Armenian poet Sayat
Nova, Fortress revives an age-old Georgian war legend, and Ashik Kerib adapts an Arabian Nights-style tale retold by Mikhail
Lermontov. They represent together one of the most unique usages cinema has ever been put to, employing the full range of native textures
(scrambling Russian traditionalism with Turkish, Arabic, Indian, Chinese and Rom) and ending up, for all of their stasis and ornate compositions, with
a party-hearty-Marty celebration of traditional culture and life in the unruly wilderness of Asian societies rarely if ever visible to American filmgoers. To
imagine the modern cinematic technology Paradjanov naturally employed to attain these ancestral images is to taste cognitive dissonance how
could these currents of forgotten humanness have been filmed at any time in the last few centuries?
The four DVDs come with an array of background/profile docs, some new interviews (including of Paradjanov's wife!), an impressionistic portrait
comparing/contrasting Paradjanov with buddy Tarkovsky, in terms of their radically different films and of their intensely antithetical personas, and, best
of all, several rare Paradjanov anthro-shorts, from Hagop Hovnatanian (1965) and the Azerbaijanian landscape portrait The Minstrel's
Song (date apparently unknown), to 1985's Songs.
For more information about The Films of Sergei Paradjanov, visit Kino International. To order
The Films of Sergei Paradjanov, go to
TCM
Shopping.
by Michael Atkinson
The Films of Sergei Paradjanov From Kino International on DVD
by Michael Atkinson | January 16, 2008
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