Larisa Shepitko: Eclipse Series 11 (2008)
Facts
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Larisa Shepitko: Eclipse Series 11 (Wings / The Ascent) - Criterion Collection
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Jan 8 19:09 EST (details)
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| Directed by | Larisa Shepitko |
| Cast | Maya Bulgakova and Boris Plotnikov |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2007 |
| DVD Release | August 12, 2008 |
| Running Time | 194 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 715515030625 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 8 19:09 EST (details) 2 DVD, Image Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC, Subtitled Languages: Russian (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Or 33 new from $20.77, 8 used from $21.21 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| This is what we have to know, remember and use |
| Long overdue Farewell |
To put it blindly, this is their best looking transfer from an old Mosfilm print since they put out "Ivan's Childhood" a year or so ago (the early ones that Criterion put out, such as "Andrei Rublev" and "Cranes Are Flying", look terrible by comparison.)
As part of the dazzling 'THAW' generation of filmmakers (Tarkovsky, Parajanov, German, Klimov) that emerged post-Stalin, Larisa Shepitko is criminally unknown. All faced censorship problems, and viewed now, her films, especially "Wings", about a woman who often escapes the unhappiness of her drab life through her imaginative memory of the past, seems quite subversive. "The Ascent" is a WWII film, with Russian characters that are at times cowardly and cruel. The winter photography and windswept sound design emit a chill from every frame, and the movie is at times poetic and detached, as Elem Klimov's better known masterwork "Come and See..." (a sort of companion piece in some ways) is visceral and subjective.
But what makes these films most remarkable is Shepitko's distinctly feminine voice and fragile human sensiblity, often letting her camera focus and linger quietly on the suffered faces of her actors, conjuring strong emotional sympathy from the slightest gesture or close-up in the same way pre-feminist directors like Bergman and Mizoguchi do (a true anamoly in the restrictive climate of the USSR). Shepitko's style is more hidden, subtle, we don't get much in the way of long/slow tracking shots, experimental editing or pretentious auteurism like many of her contemporaries.
Who knows what cinematic wonders were lost with the passing of Shepitko (Klimov's version of her uncompleted film "Farewell", while beautiful in many ways, is sadly devoid of her unique sensitive and personal touch). All I know is, ever since I saw "Wings" back in college years ago and was introduced to this genius, arguably the greatest female director there ever was, I've been pining for these films on DVD, and Criterion as always, has simply outdone itself. October 20, 2008
| Another Revelation from Eclipse |
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