Werckmeister Harmonies
Werckmeister harmóniák
Hungary
2000
145 Min
Bela Tarr follows up on his seven-hour epic Satantango, considered by some critics as one of the finest films of the 1990s, with this elegant, haunting work about the cycles of violence that have dogged Eastern European history. Jancos (Lars Rudolph) is a wide-eyed innocent who works as an occasional postal worker and as a caretaker for Mr. Ezster (Peter Fitz). An outsider and a visionary, he marvels at the miracles of creation, from the planets rotating in the heavens to the sundry animals on earth. One day, a circus featuring jars full of medical anomalies and a massive dead whale entombed in a corrugated metal trailer visits Jancos’ economically depressed village. Another more sinister attraction is a shadowy figure dubbed “The Prince,” whose nihilist rants incite the town’s disaffected to riot. Not long afterwards, Mrs. Ezster (Hanna Schygulla) cajoles her estranged husband to join a citizen’s action group against the circus, threatening to move back into his house if he doesn’t play along. Tension in the town builds until, after one of The Prince’s hate-filled speeches, throngs of angry men with blunt instruments ransack and brutalize a men’s hospital ward. When the dust clears, lives are irrevocably changed. This film was screened at the 2000 Toronto Film Festival.
(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:201835)
Born in 1955, Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr began making amateur films at the age of 16, later working as caretaker at a national House for Culture and Recreation. His amateur work brought him to the attention of the Bela Balazs Studios (named in honor of the Hungarian cinema theorist), which helped fund Tarr’s 1979 feature debut Family Nest, a work of socialist realism clearly influenced by the work of John Cassavettes. The 1981 piece The Outsider and the following year’s The Prefab People continued in much the same vein, but with a 1982 television adaptation of Macbeth, his work began to change dramatically; comprised of only two shots, the first shot (before the main title) was five minutes long, with the second 67 minutes in length. Not only did Tarr’s visual sensibility move from raw close-ups to more abstract mediums and long shots, but also his philosophical sensibility shifted from grim realism to a more metaphysical outlook similar to that of Andrei Tarkovsky. After 1984’s… read more

This is one of the best film ever made by bella tarr.,
very unique and original, because bella tarr seems didn’t really care about the story (he admit that he despise the story in a film) and… read review
A powerful film. A very, very dark film as well. Deep, dark tone to it. The film is about an innocent lad who believes in the good of people and is hopelessly optimistic. His optimism leads him to… read review
This film portrays life in a small Hungarian village during the winter. János, a mystic man talks about life and an apocalypse that is near. When a circus comes to town people are excited to see the… read review
Not only can you linger in Tarr’s static shots, but there’s also time to look around, think about other things, then return and some bent-over figure will still be slowly making his way toward the… read review