Au Hasard, Balthasar
Sep. 24th, 2005 08:35 amBresson was Tarkovsky's favourite director.
Bresson liked to use non-professional actors. Did he think he would get truth to life? but that's just what you don't get. What you do get is stiff, wide-eyed intensity, uninflected voices, an inability to register emotion.
I keep thinking of Piero della Francesca. There's the same combination of naivete and sophistication- and a stylistic rigor so pure it approaches self-parody. Balthasar is a fresco cyle on the life of a saint (who happens to be a donkey.)
Godard says this movie "contains the world". It certainly covers a lot of ground, but where are the laughs?
Bresson liked to use non-professional actors. Did he think he would get truth to life? but that's just what you don't get. What you do get is stiff, wide-eyed intensity, uninflected voices, an inability to register emotion.
I keep thinking of Piero della Francesca. There's the same combination of naivete and sophistication- and a stylistic rigor so pure it approaches self-parody. Balthasar is a fresco cyle on the life of a saint (who happens to be a donkey.)
Godard says this movie "contains the world". It certainly covers a lot of ground, but where are the laughs?
no subject
Date: 2005-09-24 06:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-24 08:36 am (UTC)A woman is supposed to be mourning her dead husband. Her face is blank and she is clearly reciting words that she has memorised. The effect is weird and distancing- but somehow the emotion comes through.