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Distributor

The Sacrifice

Offret

Sweden

1986

149 Min
Color
English, French, Swedish
Subtitled in English
  • Currently 4.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Andrei Tarkovsky

PROD Anna-Lena Wibom

SCR Andrei Tarkovsky

DP Sven Nykvist

CAST Erland Josephson, Susan Fleetwood, Tommy Kjellqvist, Allan Edwall

ED Michal Leszczylowski, Andrei Tarkovsky

Synopsis

The Sacrifice, director Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film, begins in Bergmanesque fashion on a small, remote island, where friends and family gather for drama critic Alexander’s (Erland Josephson) birthday celebration. The revelry is interrupted by a radio announcement: World War III has begun, and Mankind is only hours away from utter annihilation. Each of the guests reacts differently to the news: the most dramatic response is Alexander’s, who promises God that he’ll give up everything he holds dear, including his beloved 6-year-old son, if war is averted. Allan Edwall, a local mailman with purported mystical powers, offers to intervene with the Creator on Josephson’s behalf. The Sacrifice is so dependent upon its visuals and overall mood that any attempt at a detailed synopsis would be woefully inadequate. The willingness of Tarkovsky’s protagonist to forego all his possessions may well have sprung from the cancer-ridden director’s awareness that he, too, would soon be giving up everything to face his Maker. The Sacrifice won four awards at the Cannes Film Festival, including the Grand Prix.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:42529 )

Director

Andrei_tarkovsky

Andrei Tarkovsky

Considered one of Russia’s most distinguished contemporary directors, the late Andrei Tarkovsky is known for highly personalized and poetic films. The son of poet Arseni Tarkovsky, he studied Arabic and first worked as a geologist before attending the State Film School in Moscow under Mikhail Romm. While there he made a pair of short films, “There Will Be No Leave Today” (1959) and the acclaimed Katok i Skripka/The Steamroller and the Violin (his diploma film). Following graduation in 1960, Tarkovsky went to work for Mosfilm and made his feature-film directorial debut in 1962 with Ivanovo Detstvo/Ivan’s Childhood. The film earned him top honors at that year’s Venice Film Festival. His sophomore film, Andrei Rublev, is Tarkovsky’s most renowned work. Ostensibly a portrait of a 15th century Russian painter, the film is actually a metaphorical drama mirroring the plight of Russian artists. Some have expanded the film’s parable to reflect the dramatic effects of war and chaos upon humanity… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 7 wall posts.
Picture of David Warren

David Warren

27Jan10

This film left me speechless.. Every frame could be a painting.  
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hrapke

22Jan10

Roger Hayn-> Not only was the dialogue sometimes overcomplicated, but I also had a feeling that he was bluffing in some scenes. Trying to make it look like there was more than there really was. Especially in some in-house scenes in the first half. But then again, I loved the second half of the film, its pathos. Beautiful.   
Picture of In An Expression Of The Inexpressible

In An Expression Of The Inexpressible

3Jan10

Very nice camera work, but somehow I didn't get it, I didn't feel it, I didn't sink in it. Maybe I just wanted too much to understand everything and that's why I will give it another chance someday.   
Picture of Roger Hayn

Roger Hayn

12Oct09

10 stars for it's imagery. 0 stars for it's ridiculous dialogue. i hate it when average people and small children speak like like carl jung. that evens out to 5 stars, right?   

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Reviews

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UNTITLED

By anna karina on December 8, 2009

The Sacrifice underlines the spiritual struggle one goes through when faced with death, or rather the fear of death. Erland Josephson’s character Alexander, feels he must do something to save his family…  read review

Untitled

By Christo​pher Smith on November 20, 2009

Many will no doubt find this cinematic blasphemy, but I found legendary director Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film to be horribly uneven. A visual marvel – every frame is a work of art, exquisitely composed…  read review

Untitled

By Joshua Robert Hathawa​y on October 27, 2009

One of Tarkovsky’s finest films. The film tackles difficult philosophical questions and the human condition through incredible directing and very believable character development. The movie takes place…  read review

Untitled

By Robert W Peabody III on October 6, 2009

The Sacrifice Offret (1986)
DIR Andrei Tarkovsky
SCR Andrei Tarkovsky
DP Sven Nykvist

Protagonist has sex with a witch to save the world. Bizarrely, The Sacrifice, with…  read review

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Monologue

4 posts by 2 people 11 months ago