An ecstatic, bravura piece of filmmaking and the world's first ever one-take, entirely unedited feature film. Sokurov's amazing journey winds us though the Hermitage museum in St Petersburg, bringing Russia's turbulent history to life with a cast of thousands. A giddying watch.
I wish I had rented this film from moviemail. Then I could have switched it off and gone to bed. Instead, we hired a babysitter and devoted an entire evening to watchi... more >
I wish I had rented this film from moviemail. Then I could have switched it off and gone to bed. Instead, we hired a babysitter and devoted an entire evening to watching the dullest piece of filmaking in history. it is possibly the most self indulgent, overrated, ill-inspired work I have ever seen. I have never enjoyed visiting museums, but at least you get to walk around. The one redeeming feature is a fabulous orchestra at the very end. But, please. This film seemed like the sick idea of a couple of students that managed to persuade someone to lend them the money to shoot it. I wish they hadn't. < less
By Barry Forshaw on 10th July 2003
A truly stunning movie, Sokurov's delirious single-take masterpiece enjoys an exemplary DVD transfer here. more >
A truly stunning movie, Sokurov's delirious single-take masterpiece enjoys an exemplary DVD transfer here. < less
Russian Ark is not only a film of incomparable technical ambition; a sinuous, languorous, labyrinthine ramble, achieved in a single, astounding 96 minute digital take,... more >
Russian Ark is not only a film of incomparable technical ambition; a sinuous, languorous, labyrinthine ramble, achieved in a single, astounding 96 minute digital take, that glides stealthily through the gilded splendours of the Hermitage at St Petersburg, guided by an 18th century French diplomat- with audience and a mumbling off-screen "spy" joined as spectators to a sumptuous array of paintings and sculptures (Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Canova..), classical concerts, a grand ball, specific historical pageants and figures, including a now young, now aged Empress Catherine II; it is also a pretentious, self-indulgent elaboration of the director Sokurov's thematic concerns, a preposterous virtuoso display of choreography (marshalling a cast of almost a thousand) and costumes, an extraordinary, painstakingly rehearsed theatrical performance- replete with lugubrious longueurs- that renders editing redundant; a refined examination of the links between past and present, various art forms, Russian and European civilisation, illusion and reality; a "ne plus ultra" culmination of certain arthouse aspirations that also serves as a beautiful eulogy of cinema history, subjectively recalling Last Year at Marienbad, Celine and Julie go Boating, Visconti's The Leopard, Bondarchuk's War and Peace, Anger's Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome, Ophuls, Von Sternberg, Kubrick et al; a noble, elegiac testament to celluloid and the prodigious ten minute take, an allusive celebration tinged with melancholy, a closure, an opening, a deliciously sensuous surreal journey from within a disturbed mind, a Carrollian wander through a cultural warren; an ego trip - with camera as eye for an I - for director and viewer alike, an eyes wide shut meditation on vision, voyeurism, identity; an intimate space odyssey of 2002, an ethereal exploration of Time, a graceful, ghostly reflection on transience and the echoing footfalls of history, a remembrance of things past, a Proustian sentence; a dream, death, eternity...and none of the above. < less