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Damnation

Kárhozat

Hungary

1988

116 Min
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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DIR Béla Tarr

PROD József Marx

SCR Béla Tarr, László Krasznahorkai

DP Gábor Medvigy

CAST Miklós Székely B., Vali Kerekes, Gyula Pauer, György Cserhalmi

ED Ágnes Hranitzky

Synopsis

Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr began his career making social realist domestic dramas, similar to the work of John Cassavettes. The feature before Damnation, Almanac of Fall, showed Tarr moving toward a more visually stylized form of filmmaking. With Damnation, the first of his collaborations with novelist Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Tarr adopts a formally rigorous style, featuring long takes and slow tracking shots of the bleak landscape that surrounds the characters. Shot in black-and-white, Damnation tells the story of Karrer (Miklos B. Szekely), a depressed man in love with a married woman (Vali Kerekes) who sings at the local bar, Titanik. The singer has broken off their affair, despite her profession of love for him. She wants to improve her life. She dreams of becoming famous, but she herself embodies all of Karrer’s hopes and dreams. Karrer is offered smuggling work by Willarsky (Gyula Pauer), the bartender at Titanik. Despite his lack of other prospects, Karrer tries to haggle with Willarsky over his take. Karrer eventually decides to offer the job to the singer’s husband, Sebastyen (Gyorgy Cserhalmi), who has fallen on hard times. This gets the husband out of the way for a while, but things don’t go as Karrer plans with the singer. There’s a big, drunken dance, which everyone in town attends (though one demented soul prefers to dance maniacally in the rain outside). Afterwards, one betrayal falls upon another, leaving Karrer in despair, alienated from all of humanity. This film laid the groundwork for Tarr’s next collaboration with Krasznahorkai, Satantango, a seven-hour film which they spent years developing, and which many consider Tarr’s masterpiece.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:119467)

Director

Bela_tarr

Béla Tarr

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

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SilkeK

7Feb10

The walls are endless, and so is the rain.  
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PolarisDiB

10Jan10

Finally got around to experiencing the collective international fangasm that is Bela Tarr. He is good: utilizing ambient sound collages with long takes, he is able to bring the viewer right into the introspective nature of his movies. Philosophical dilemmas populate the foreground in dialog while the actual story and visual narrative happens in the background. He learned a lot from Tarkovsky.  
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Allison

22Dec09

This beautiful rain movie is worth watching.  
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Robert W Peabody III

12Dec09

The fog gets into the corners, into the lungs.....it settles in your soul.   

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By Joriah Goad on June 11, 2009

Bela Tarr entrances his audience with delicate camera movement and lingering shots, alongside a spell of audible silence; strings that hold us weightless throughout; his serene and poetic use of dialogue…  read review

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