Edited by Sergey Toymentsev
Despite an output of only 7 feature films in 20 years, Andrei Tarkovsky has had a profound influence on international cinema. Famous for their spiritual depth and incredible visual beauty, his films have gained cult status among cineastes and are often included in ranking polls and charts dedicated to the ‘best movies ever made.’ Beginning with the late 1980s, Tarkovsky’s highly complex cinema has continuously attracted scholarly attention by generating countless hermeneutic challenges and possibilities for film critics.
List of contributorsIntroduction: Refocus on Tarkovsky
Introduction to Part I
1. Tarkovsky’s Childhood: Between Trauma and Myth - Evgeniy Tsymbal2. Trava-Travlya-Trata: Tarkovsky’s Psychobiography à la Lettre - Andrei Gornykh3. Does Tarkovsky Have a Film Theory? - Sergey Toymentsev
Introduction to Part II
4. The Child’s Eye View of War in Ivan’s Childhood, by Sara Pankenier Weld5. The Truth of Direct Observation: Andrei Rublev and the Documentary Style of Soviet Cinema in the 1960s - Zdenko Mandušić6. Temporality and the Long Take in Stalker - Donato Totaro7. Framing Infinity in Tarkovsky’s Nostalghia - Yelizaveta Goldfarb Moss8. Approaching the Irreal: Realistic Sound Design in Andrei Tarkovsky’s Films - Julia Shpinitskaya
Introduction to Part III
9. Andrei Tarkovsky, Or the Thing from the Inner Space - Slavoj Žižek10. Wounds of the Past: Andrei Tarkovsky and the Melancholic Imagination - Linda Belau & Ed Cameron11. The Flesh of Time: Solaris and the Chiasmic Image - Robert Efird12. Cinema as Spiritual Exercise: Tarkovsky and Hadot - Anne Eakin Moss13. Memory and Trace - Mikhail Iampolski
Introduction to Part IV
14. Zvyagintsev and Tarkovsky: Influence, Depersonalization, and Autonomy - Lisa Ryoko Wakamiya15. Von Trier and Tarkovsky: from Antithesis to Counter-Sublime - Sergey Toymentsev and Anton Dolin
ReFocus: The Films of Andrei Tarkovsky is an excellent new item in “ReFocus: The International Directors Series,” [...] a valuable collection that succeeds at avoiding deifying Tarkovskii and presents new theoretical perspectives on his work.
ReFocus: The Films of Andrei Tarkovsky is an excellent new item in “ReFocus: The International Directors Series,” [...] a valuable collection that succeeds at avoiding deifying Tarkovskii and presents new theoretical perspectives on his work.
Provides a number of novel perspectives for the prospective reader, and accomplishes the aim set out within the introduction ‘to emphasize the urgency of a more sober appreciation of Tarkovsky’s films as well as inspire further critical inquiry and debate’ (8). The Films of Andrei Tarkovsky should, therefore, serve as a welcome critical companion to other texts in this area.
This collection is a very successful attempt to update English-language literature on the great Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky by applying current theoretical approaches in the humanities to his work. [...] a well-rounded volume that nicely complements existing scholarship and can serve a variety of purposes.