Praying Through Cinema - Understanding Andrei Tarkovsky

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Video essay analysis on the legendary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky, the purpose of art, and a lifelong search for truth and meaning.
Other episodes in the Filmmaker Philosophies series:
Akira Kurosawa - • The Humanistic Cinema ...
Terrence Malick - • Understanding the Film...
Werner Herzog - • The Inner Chronicle of...
Sources:
Andrei Tarkovsky - Sculpting in Time: amzn.to/38F9DMt
Like Stories of Old - Complete Reading List: kit.co/likestoriesofold/readi...
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Music:
Dexter Britain - Elegy
Dexter Britain - Atonement
Dexter Britain - All Our Needs
Music licensed from Musicbed, start your 30 day free trial at: share.mscbd.fm/likestoriesofold
Additional Music:
Edvard Grieg - Peer Gynt Suite no. 1, Op. 46 - II. Aase’s Death - (performed by Musopen Symphony)
Steven O‘Brien - Solemn Choral Piece No. 2
Steven O‘Brien - Solemn Choral Piece No. 1

Пікірлер: 854

  • @LikeStoriesofOld
    @LikeStoriesofOld4 жыл бұрын

    What's your favorite Tarkovsky film? And why? Let me know below! :)

  • @minudas392

    @minudas392

    4 жыл бұрын

    can you make a video on sacred games, it really has metaphorical ideas about Indian mythology, your way of explaining movies would really make a difference in understanding the series from a different view.

  • @THINK86200

    @THINK86200

    4 жыл бұрын

    What was the name of a person sacred place someone would have to a special location that has a lot of meaning to them. I can’t remember what video it was from. I think it started with a “Y” idk... it was a long word. There was two words now that I think about it. One for a place, and one for an item... can you help me out if you know what I’m talking about? If so thx, if not, it’s all good (I’ll just do more searching)

  • @edwartvonfectonia4362

    @edwartvonfectonia4362

    4 жыл бұрын

    solaris...

  • @vasiliosapocalypse1203

    @vasiliosapocalypse1203

    4 жыл бұрын

    Andrei Rublev. No doubt. The film is such a masterpiece of cinematic iconography. War, faith, truth, lies, all in a time where everyone is miserable, old, sick, stupid, violent, weak, scared, prideful. I think the film represents the world, the truth of Christ. The bell scene, the pillaging, the silence, the fear, all come down to one thing: the love of God in a world run by devils. In a way, all of Tarkovsky’s films are about faith, memory, and sacrifice. Russian Orthodox have a word transliterated as podvig. I think this sums up Tarkovsky’s characters perfectly. His characters are the most realistic for me because everything is happening internally. In Rublev, after all the chaos you are left with the expression of the faces. In that sense, Tarkovsky sees people as witnesses of the world. We may not know how to react, in fact Tarkovsky’s characters don’t seem to react very much, but we only know how they feel: the despair, the desperation, the confusion, the anger, the love, the relief. I think Rublev is where Tarkovsky mastered his craft to the highest potential. Why? Because it had more to do with the personal as the universal. The world in Rublev is almost foreign. And I think that’s where he became most free to invest his truest take on how he sees himself as an artist, as a human being, placed into the context of the world at large. It is the truest exploration of Man’s essence, which must be spiritual. I’m not saying his other films are “worse” than Rublev. His last 3 films are about men who are dealing with a world they are or will no longer be a part of, and so all that’s left is love, sacrifice. But Rublev delves even further than apocalypse/post-apocalypse. It concerns the apocalypse of the soul itself. This is why it is a truly Christian outlook, from an Orthodox perspective. That the death of the world is no different than the death of the spirit. Rublev is the only one of his films that deals with these simultaneously, rather than separately. It reveals the connection between the sacrifice of Christ with our sacrifice. The connection can only be, and must be, love. I would go as far as to say it is the greatest film of all time.

  • @Virolaxion

    @Virolaxion

    4 жыл бұрын

    Stalker. Also my all time favourite. Once you understand the concept of "The Zone" it comes into biting clarity and every line of dialogue deepens your understanding of humanity. The driving force behind the Mirror is too personal to have the same effect but if I was Russian that would probably surpass Stalker

  • @MarkKeuthan
    @MarkKeuthan4 жыл бұрын

    As a veteran teacher of film and television, I do not say this lightly - excellent work.

  • @MrAngryorangutan

    @MrAngryorangutan

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your service

  • @kaydgaming

    @kaydgaming

    5 ай бұрын

    Is he getting Extra Credit for this 😂

  • @Loquacious_Jackson

    @Loquacious_Jackson

    5 ай бұрын

    His voice is cringe

  • @DAWGDigest

    @DAWGDigest

    5 ай бұрын

    As a veteran big academic dork, my opinion is to be taken with a grain of salt, excellent work.

  • @lnspector
    @lnspector4 жыл бұрын

    Instant like for Andrei Tarkovsky.

  • @art_means_artificial

    @art_means_artificial

    4 жыл бұрын

    Danny Boyle names Andrei Tarkovsky‘s Solaris the “greatest space film ever”.

  • @dawsondjodvorj2408

    @dawsondjodvorj2408

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@art_means_artificial 2001 is better, but solaris is great too.

  • @michaelwu7678

    @michaelwu7678

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dawson Djodvorj 2001 is better sci-fi. Solaris is better psy-fi.

  • @dawsondjodvorj2408

    @dawsondjodvorj2408

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelwu7678 what the hell is a psy-fi?

  • @michaelwu7678

    @michaelwu7678

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dawson Djodvorj Psychological Fiction. I made it up, but I think it fits.

  • @helmiazizm
    @helmiazizm4 жыл бұрын

    I cried. This is definitely something that I need right now as I lost my passion on what I enjoy the most: mathematics, making music, reading, writing, everything. I didn't know how it just went away from me, and I pray everyday that tomorrow will be better and I will be free from this unknown sadness that haunts me. I really want to do something that gives my life meaning again, but it's just too hard. Too hard that I can't breathe properly when I tried to get up. Is this something that Andrei Rublev felt back then? Oh crap, sorry for that rambling haha. Anyway, thank you, LSOO. I love you. Keep making good contents to inspire people to do something good.

  • @sofiaanr6748

    @sofiaanr6748

    4 жыл бұрын

    Have felt like you... life and world too great to leave it hidden in rubbish. So let us get what we love back

  • @karenhartman9774

    @karenhartman9774

    4 жыл бұрын

    You might just be in the cocoon and you are about to be reborn and able to fly! Hold that vision for yourself. As will I. 🙏🐛 🦋🙏

  • @arai6147

    @arai6147

    4 жыл бұрын

    The feeling is mutual..a bit too mutual. Life has felt meaningless and that unknown sadness is crippling at times. This video definitely sparked something in me again, something i had in my childhood yet lost in time. I can't describe it objectively but it's something you can just...feel. undescribable yet very specific in subjective detail for one self. Man i rambled off too hah.

  • @mondopinion3777

    @mondopinion3777

    4 жыл бұрын

    Your deepest self may be moving you to new ways of being. You may have lost your former passion because you have extracted all you need from them. Unknown sadness, unnameable yearning -- that is Stalker.

  • @nonnobissolum

    @nonnobissolum

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jg1rs "It's not in my control, but it's faithful." I like that. Cheers.

  • @malcolm4737
    @malcolm47374 жыл бұрын

    Your channel is art.

  • @TheBritomart

    @TheBritomart

    4 жыл бұрын

    Malcolm 47 And more- art often is indescribable, LSOO miraculously captures the complexities & broad disparities into a concise assimilation which never fails to move one into greater understanding and connectedness. Each upload is a revelation

  • @swarupkumar2

    @swarupkumar2

    4 жыл бұрын

    Pure Art

  • @ObeySilence

    @ObeySilence

    3 жыл бұрын

    my channel is fart. check it out. the obscene subconscious of the Internet.

  • @carolinafine8050

    @carolinafine8050

    3 жыл бұрын

    Don’t have a cow, man.

  • @aytheonashhelm3450

    @aytheonashhelm3450

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes

  • @bastiat8322
    @bastiat83224 жыл бұрын

    This is the best media I've ever seen regarding Tarkovsky. You were able to capture the essence of his art and distill it in a lucid way without over-analyzing it. It was like watching Tarkovsky breaking down Tarkovsky's work. Amazing. The Mirror is my personal fave- it makes me wish I could speak Russian so I didn't have to take my eyes off the gorgeous visuals to read. Mind you, all his work is like that...

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    4 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully said.

  • @sameerkrane1

    @sameerkrane1

    Жыл бұрын

    True ❤

  • @creativeobx8367

    @creativeobx8367

    Жыл бұрын

    Bravo

  • @jungiantrip
    @jungiantrip4 жыл бұрын

    "But there has to be more." That scene has always made me weep. From the first time I saw it until this very viewing.

  • @bretdouglas9407

    @bretdouglas9407

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is more

  • @user-vq1yj2gv1m

    @user-vq1yj2gv1m

    4 жыл бұрын

    It is not a very precise translation of the verse, though. 'But it is not enough' would be more accurate to the initial meaning. (the scene is great nonetheless, just wanted to clarify)

  • @jungiantrip

    @jungiantrip

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jg1rsA couple of times when I was in seminary.

  • @edgepixel8467

    @edgepixel8467

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-vq1yj2gv1m “Tolka etava mala,” yes :) I don’t speak russian, but I could get a grasp for some expressions. So I felt that one wasn’t translated properly.

  • @arivertoeveryone
    @arivertoeveryone4 жыл бұрын

    there hasnt been a better timing for a tarkovsky analysis im just starting to get into the heritage of my ancestors - russian art - literature, music and of course movies. thank you for contributing to this journey

  • @denismonterodiaz476

    @denismonterodiaz476

    4 жыл бұрын

    Anton Chekhov should be world wide mandatory reading. Greatest short story writer ever. Just in case you haven’t read him yet.

  • @michaelwu7678

    @michaelwu7678

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dostoevsky and Tolstoy are great too. Russian literature is ridiculously rich. You also have Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, Bulgakov, Lermontov, Akhmatova, Pasternak, Solzhenitsyn, Gorky, and more. All are worth looking into. And this isn’t even touching the many great philosophers and theologians.

  • @kichelmoon6365

    @kichelmoon6365

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Germany, but over the last few months I started looking into russian classics and I absolutely love them. Could you send me some of the music you found that you enjoy? I'm really curious but I don't really know where to start...

  • @michaelwu7678

    @michaelwu7678

    4 жыл бұрын

    kichel moon Some of the greatest Russian composers are Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Rachmaninoff, Shostakovich, and Stravinksy. You might want to start with them; just look up some of their greatest works online. Classical music though just in general is a bit difficult to get into, but I hope you do. It’s definitely worth it. Personally I’m more a fan of the German and Austrian musical tradition with Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, but the Russians are good too. I just don’t like the Romantic Period. Have fun!

  • @kichelmoon6365

    @kichelmoon6365

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelwu7678 thank you so much, that's exactly what I was looking for. I know Tchaikovsky, I'm a little into classical music and like his stuff very much. I can't wait to dig into the rest.

  • @DerCineast
    @DerCineast4 жыл бұрын

    “What is art? (...) Like a declaration of love: the consciousness of our dependence on each other. A confession. An unconscious act that none the less reflects the true meaning of life-love and sacrifice.” - Andrei Tarkovsky

  • @CrimeanHorseArcher

    @CrimeanHorseArcher

    4 жыл бұрын

    This reminds the story of the butterfly and the candle: Butterfly falls in love with candle fire. It flies around the fire first, then knowingly sacrifices itself by touching it.

  • @voyance4elle

    @voyance4elle

    4 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful! Thank you 🙏

  • @JaydevRaol
    @JaydevRaol4 жыл бұрын

    It's good that more and more KZreadrs are now covering Andrei Tarkovsky too. Bcoz I think we can all agree that there is enough 'The Dark Knight' video essays on this platform already. Video Essayists should give limelight to other films and directors that are not covered before. And that is precisely one of many reasons why I love your channel. You have covered so many different films and directors. I absolutely love it. Please keep up the good work. 👍

  • @art_means_artificial

    @art_means_artificial

    4 жыл бұрын

    Danny Boyle names Andrei Tarkovsky‘s Solaris the “greatest space film ever”.

  • @JaydevRaol

    @JaydevRaol

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@art_means_artificial 👍

  • @billbrasky8525

    @billbrasky8525

    4 жыл бұрын

    Well put; there is a plethora of Hollywood film analysis on here that is so played out at this point. Ya, I love Kubrick too, but damn, I can only watch so many fanboys explain every metaphor in The Shining.

  • @tonyjoseph5197

    @tonyjoseph5197

    4 жыл бұрын

    It ain't easy I think.

  • @JanneSala
    @JanneSala4 жыл бұрын

    My dad showed me Stalker one day, we watched it together in the dim of evening. It was a striking movie, a visual and atmospheric feast for the senses, and it said so much with so little. My dad was very quiet too, usually he makes snarky comments on the movies we watch. There's something about that raw, emotional essence of Tarkovsky's movies that made it seem almost poetic. I won't forget Stalker or Solaris easily.

  • @dariopalomba8420
    @dariopalomba84203 жыл бұрын

    Stalker is probably one of my favorite Tarkovsky 's movies. When we were young, starting to study cinema, we had the opportunity to meet the maestro in a beautiful cliff near Napoli. He was astonished by the beauty of the sea and the prospective. He called it "the vertical sea". Thank you for your video, forgive my poor English and greetings from Athens, Greece.

  • @vasiliosapocalypse1203
    @vasiliosapocalypse12034 жыл бұрын

    Andrei Rublev has to be my personal favorite. The film is such a masterpiece of cinematic iconography. War, faith, truth, lies, all in a time where everyone is miserable, old, sick, stupid, violent, weak, scared, prideful. I think the film represents the world, the truth of Christ. The bell scene, the pillaging, the silence, the fear, all come down to one thing: the love of God in a world run by devils. In a way, all of Tarkovsky’s films are about faith, memory, and sacrifice. Russian Orthodox have a word transliterated as podvig. I think this sums up Tarkovsky’s characters perfectly. His characters are the most realistic for me because everything is happening internally. In Rublev, after all the chaos you are left with the expression of the faces. In that sense, Tarkovsky sees people as witnesses of the world. We may not know how to react, in fact Tarkovsky’s characters don’t seem to react very much, but we only know how they feel: the despair, the desperation, the confusion, the anger, the love, the relief. I think Rublev is where Tarkovsky mastered his craft to the highest potential. Why? Because it had more to do with the personal as the universal. The world in Rublev is almost foreign. And I think that’s where he became most free to invest his truest take on how he sees himself as an artist, as a human being, placed into the context of the world at large. It is the truest exploration of Man’s essence, which must be spiritual. I’m not saying his other films are “worse” than Rublev. His last 3 films are about men who are dealing with a world they are or will no longer be a part of, and so all that’s left is love, sacrifice. But Rublev delves even further than apocalypse/post-apocalypse. It concerns the apocalypse of the soul itself. This is why it is a truly Christian outlook, from an Orthodox perspective. That the death of the world is no different than the death of the spirit. Rublev is the only one of his films that deals with these simultaneously, rather than separately. It reveals the connection between the sacrifice of Christ with our sacrifice. The connection can only be, and must be, love. I would go as far as to say it is the greatest film of all time.

  • @jackdomanski6758

    @jackdomanski6758

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes.

  • @steve5024

    @steve5024

    4 жыл бұрын

    Great comment

  • @satkirtan49

    @satkirtan49

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for such a insightful review.

  • @KitaVanski

    @KitaVanski

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bravo!

  • @mariaciroc

    @mariaciroc

    3 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful perspective and outlook on home

  • @3XwithFatih
    @3XwithFatih4 жыл бұрын

    Tarkovsky has been my favourite director, since I watched few of his movies and read one of his books, when I was a teenager. But this video reminded me even an earlier memory of mine. My first experience in a movie theater when I was 3 years old. As a curious child, I reached the curtain the movie was projected, believing there is a world behind it. To my suprise, there was only a wall. Remembering this sweet memory keeps me in touch with my childhood innocence. Thank you for this.

  • @voyance4elle

    @voyance4elle

    4 жыл бұрын

    This is beautiful

  • @3XwithFatih

    @3XwithFatih

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@voyance4elle Thanks for the appreciation :)

  • @mantheory6432
    @mantheory64324 жыл бұрын

    Never has a suggested you tube video cause me such introspection and self doubt. I can't explain how joyous and deeply lost I feel at the same time. Your words sir that is the art that touches one's heart. If their is a loving creator may he let your voice reach us all.

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wow, beautiful words!

  • @poetcomic1
    @poetcomic14 жыл бұрын

    Ingmar Bergman had never HEARD of him when he saw some scenes from Andrei Rublev being screened at the studio for the translators. Not understanding a word he knew at once "This director has accomplished what I hae struggled all my life to achieve.".

  • @ablazedark

    @ablazedark

    3 жыл бұрын

    bergman never hearing tarkovsky till rublev is pure fabrication. he has watched ivan's childhood the year it came out and actually reflects on it. stop spewing lies for trying to get some attention.

  • @honklerfinkelstein2113
    @honklerfinkelstein21134 жыл бұрын

    I'm reading Sculpting in Time at the moment. His films just touch something deep down in me

  • @art_means_artificial

    @art_means_artificial

    4 жыл бұрын

    Andrei Tarkovsky is the genius of all time. The God of Cinema!

  • @AEO21Productions

    @AEO21Productions

    4 жыл бұрын

    Honestly I haven't gotten into his work further than Solaris but it just seems like he was deeply in touch with the human condition.. suffering, longing, love, the search for true meaning.. can't wait to see more of his films

  • @roberthipolito1351

    @roberthipolito1351

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same brother, i just began reading it yesterday. His films are something else.

  • @yachanakhatker706
    @yachanakhatker7065 ай бұрын

    There’s something about this video. It is very close to my heart, I feel teary, pardon my sickness for being too emotional. But this is something I watch to comfort myself at rough times. Thankyou. This is what art does to us.

  • @patdcannon
    @patdcannon7 ай бұрын

    Feel like crying every time I watch this analysis. The music ,the words and the images flow together beautifully. A piece of art to describe a lifetime of artistry. Georgous. Thank you and congratulations

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache4 жыл бұрын

    This channel always dishes out quality content.

  • @nowheredan27

    @nowheredan27

    4 жыл бұрын

    Guess who haha

  • @gdijsn4729

    @gdijsn4729

    3 жыл бұрын

    How the heck are you here too😂 this isn't even anime

  • @jacksterpiece
    @jacksterpiece4 жыл бұрын

    "A man can only see as far as he himself has gone" -- thank you, LSOO, for diving into your own depths so that we can learn from such wondrous explorations as these. Timely, too, for I believe we must understand this felt language of art and the spirit if we are to move forward both as individuals and as our collective. Much love!

  • @art_means_artificial

    @art_means_artificial

    4 жыл бұрын

    Andrei Tarkovsky is the genius of all time. The God of Cinema!

  • @fusion9619

    @fusion9619

    4 жыл бұрын

    that's why we're here... to see it all, and appreciate it all. Birth and death and birth again, a new adventure each time, new mountains to climb and dragons to imperil your journey.

  • @jacksterpiece

    @jacksterpiece

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@fusion9619 Yes! And each new go around we hope to aim closer towards the Light, and to be prepared for the dragon in whatever way it will appear 🙏🏻🌟🕊️

  • @headphonezen7155

    @headphonezen7155

    4 жыл бұрын

    Depth sees depth

  • @AEO21Productions

    @AEO21Productions

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@fusion9619 eyyyy.. you a fan of Peterson?!? lol

  • @ROGUESPIRIT_
    @ROGUESPIRIT_4 жыл бұрын

    Your videos always make me fell as though I transcend the human condition and gain an understanding that i miss in my daily life. Always overcome me with emotion for reasons I don't know. I love this channel, your videos make me feel whole.

  • @pdzombie1906
    @pdzombie19064 жыл бұрын

    Finally... Stalker is my favorite, I see it as a meta approach to Tarkovski's role as a filmmaker and artist. Like the stalker, Tarkovski guides the scientist (our reason) and the writer (our intellect) trough the zone (his films) in order to find the room (our hearts) and see the truth of our spirit... Beautiful as always, thanx!!!

  • @mjolninja9358

    @mjolninja9358

    4 жыл бұрын

    PD Zombie goddamn that’s beautiful

  • @samuel0851

    @samuel0851

    3 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully put!

  • @panchalbhupendra1782

    @panchalbhupendra1782

    2 жыл бұрын

    It also my all time favourite !!!

  • @johnlewis8156
    @johnlewis81564 жыл бұрын

    This video made me slow down and take it all in. Im in the U.S and are not movie buff and have never heard about this director. But at least for me I "felt" this video more than I "watched"it(hope I don't sound too weird). My heart rate dropped and I was mesmerized by his words. I would read them the first time and then rewind it and feel them. I felt like I understood them better that way. Your videos are always great but this one (maybe due to how it starts with the still images) primed me for something else. I'm gonna sit on it for a while and see if I'm taking it all in or if I'm just thinking too hard. Alot of words to say thank you for all that you do! And for sharing something more personal than normal.!

  • @Trowa71

    @Trowa71

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can't think about it too hard. You think about it as much as you feel is necessary.

  • @art_means_artificial

    @art_means_artificial

    4 жыл бұрын

    Danny Boyle names Andrei Tarkovsky‘s Solaris the “greatest space film ever”.

  • @atallguynh

    @atallguynh

    4 жыл бұрын

    You don't sound weird at all. Not in the slightest.

  • @AEO21Productions

    @AEO21Productions

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@art_means_artificial Danny Boyle is missing a fuse.. has he *seeeeen* that space flick, 'Sunshine'?

  • @xAMSTERCheshir

    @xAMSTERCheshir

    4 жыл бұрын

    You've got the point. I think that if you say this words then all this work was worth doing, including Tarkovsky's films and this lovely video. Slow down and think.. feel. That's the point. I watch the Stalker over and over again in times when i need to slow down, think and feel something transcendental. Try it, maybe you will love this film too.

  • @MarisaandDanTaddeoDufren-nq4vv
    @MarisaandDanTaddeoDufren-nq4vv4 ай бұрын

    Whenever I am feeling down or out of touch with the chaos of life, I come to this video. And it touches and moves me every time. I don’t normally comment but had to commend you on your work, doing such an incredible job discussing a filmmaker whose art I hold so dear. You did an excellent job and by extension have added to the art and my appreciation of it

  • @wrestlingbuff87
    @wrestlingbuff874 жыл бұрын

    Honesty, I've only seen Stalker, Solaris and The Sacrifice, all once, but each left their own indelible mark on me in such profound ways. Tarkovsky's approach to cinema was truly vital and loved that he respected the viewer to come to their own understanding of his films.

  • @getjac
    @getjac4 жыл бұрын

    I feel weirdly proud of you for this video, lol. This is seriously an impressive piece of work, artistic and philosophical in its own right. You captured the beauty, wonder and reverence of his films so perfectly. Tarkovsky has been my favorite director for a long time and I'm really grateful to have this new resource to return to when I want to explore his work more deeply.

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    4 жыл бұрын

  • @heygreydey
    @heygreydey7 ай бұрын

    Tarkovsky: a slow pan from the gritty to the sublime, just like life. Beautiful take here.

  • @LostEntradista
    @LostEntradista4 жыл бұрын

    I’m so happy more and more people are beginning to recognize Tarkovskys work. One of the greats.

  • @glengustafson6959
    @glengustafson69594 жыл бұрын

    I knew Tarkovsky and understood him well as an artist even though we didn’t share any spoken languages. I was a visiting student working with my mentor Sven Nykvist during filming of “The Sacrifice” and during rare breaks we sat at a table in the corridor outside the studio in Filmhuset. As an undergrad I had been a projectionist at the Pacific Film Archive and had run many of his films for classes at Berkeley so although I was a painting major at the time he was pleased I knew his films and invited me to film them at work. When we met he nicknamed me “Stranger in Paradise” (an American in Sweden). I had learned Swedish in order to study at the film school in Stockholm and thru his interpreter he encouraged me to go visit The Hermitage in (then) Leningrad. I think about him often in my own studio as I clear my head from my day job as a visual effects artist. Those film makers are artists on another level.

  • @themidrashim

    @themidrashim

    3 жыл бұрын

    Damn...I wish I had met him also. So far I went deepest into his work and "met" him there.

  • @g9ld175
    @g9ld1753 жыл бұрын

    i'm really out here almost crying over a video essay... thank you so much for the dedication you put in all of your videos

  • @hyperballadbradx6486
    @hyperballadbradx64864 жыл бұрын

    This video is so moving. I've never quite experienced why I love and strive for feeling when watching films so directly and so clearly before. It's been an affirmation

  • @OutstandingScreenplays
    @OutstandingScreenplays4 жыл бұрын

    My favourite is Solaris. If you find yourself twiddling your thumbs after 15 minutes then its probably not for you. If you find yourself glued to the screen then you know how I feel about this film.

  • @vickhs
    @vickhs4 жыл бұрын

    You really nailed it by saying that Tarkovsky's films aren't meant to be intelectually dissected, but rather just to be felt. That's exactly what happened to me the only two times I ever watched anything he's done (I've only seen The Mirror and The Sacrifice). I loved The Sacrifice from the very start but I didn't really understand The Mirror, to be honest. As soon as it finished the first thing I thought to myself was "uh, I guess I'm too dumb to get this". And yet I could never dismiss it as a "bad film", because I was still left with a really strong emotional impression. I could never write down the feelings I had into words, but maybe that was the point? I guess I'll watch more of his stuff. On a sidenote, I don't think there's any other director who can make burning houses look this beautiful.

  • @mondopinion3777

    @mondopinion3777

    4 жыл бұрын

    People were more attuned to sentimentality and nostalgia back then, which makes The Mirror less accessible to our modern mindset. Watch Stalker, and Andrei Rublev.

  • @amiracleone2803
    @amiracleone28034 жыл бұрын

    In the past my life was so awful and cruel that I would dream of a brighter future. In the present I dream of the past because its the thing in my life that doesn't get worse everyday...............

  • @nowheretogo-so-i-stay
    @nowheretogo-so-i-stay4 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful analysis. I’m crying. I’m a grown man. Thank you for this.

  • @Waterboyofsuperman
    @Waterboyofsuperman4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this beautiful and profound tribute to the greatest film director of all time. Since I discovered Tarkovsky I have studied and searched for a director with a comparable vision and have found none.

  • @b.baklandsky556

    @b.baklandsky556

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bresson is right up there! Haneke is a modern one. Fellini, Bergmann and Polanski also great. Last years "portrait of a layd on fire" by Céline Sciamma was fantastic. In my opinion.

  • @MochitoMaker
    @MochitoMaker4 жыл бұрын

    I am speechless. It's so great that you have taken a Russian regiesseur, maybe it will broaden people's perception of the Russian culture a bit more. The background music makes all the words so much impactful.

  • @sandwichsupernova
    @sandwichsupernova4 жыл бұрын

    This was a wonderful tribute to perhaps the greatest filmmaker of all time. As a lover of Tarkovsky, every frame of this video tugged at my heartstrings. This is the kind of content streaming platforms were made for. I applaud you, sir, and will share this far and wide.

  • @RedziRekuEdze
    @RedziRekuEdze4 жыл бұрын

    I felt it, my eyes gathered tears.

  • @00HoODBoy
    @00HoODBoy4 жыл бұрын

    this came at the perfect time for me as well.

  • @moniquevamado
    @moniquevamado4 жыл бұрын

    If you ever doubt that you are doing an important work in the world, may that doubt be stricken from you forever. You are possibly the most important channel about film on KZread and are doing a profound work. Thank you so much for the hard work, thought, reflection and depth you put into these videos. May it be blessed and abundantly rewarded. - Monique

  • @anitaoomen8021
    @anitaoomen80214 жыл бұрын

    This is poetry. Thank you! The quote at the end reminds me of a quote by John Granger where he said that the aim of stories is not entertainment, but our edification. It's always stuck with me.

  • @stuminnis4050
    @stuminnis40503 жыл бұрын

    This was astonishingly lovely. I wrote my doctoral dissertation on Tarkovsky but haven’t watched most of his films in years. (Andrei Rublev and Stalker, my favorites, being the exceptions). Now I feel compelled to revisit all of them. Thank you for this wonderful piece of commentary.

  • @yusufalsanad
    @yusufalsanad4 жыл бұрын

    Sir Tarkovsky's "Solaris" is probably my absolute FAVORITE of his work! There's something so... profound and truly beautiful about that film, underneath the jaw-dropping gorgeous visuals. The themes/ideas the man behind the camera tackles are BEYOND fascinating and certainly... timeless, hence why I LOVE him so! ^^

  • @tamerov2387
    @tamerov23874 жыл бұрын

    Probably the greatest video on KZread...

  • @GeraAbi
    @GeraAbi2 ай бұрын

    Stalker is a absolute masterpiece. Seen it yesterday again and it wont go out of my head. Andrei Tarkovsky was a genius and Stalker is a absolutely unique experience. Soon I will watch it again.. and again and again.. hopefully, when I someday have a son, he too will be interested in this beautiful art. Stalker is a state of mind.

  • @germancamou4044
    @germancamou40445 ай бұрын

    My local theatre screened all of Tarkovsky’s film throughout the whole month of December and i decided to watch all of them for the first time. I must say I know understand why Tarkovsky is one of the best. To be honest it wasn’t an easy journey, and I do have to rewatch them since I slept in some of them (not of boredom). All of this to say, your video essay is one of the greatest I’ve seen and it really made it feel like a full circle moment after my experience with Tarkovsky ‘s cinematography. Thank you for doing an excellent analysis and looking forward to discover more videos in your channel 🤎.

  • @michaelmcdonald3660
    @michaelmcdonald36604 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful video essay. Tarkovsky is a favorite director of mine and "Sculpting in Time" somehow said everything I feel about art but haven't been able to say. I always knew when people talked about why some films are great and others aren't, that there was a quality they were ignoring. The awakening of the soul is always there in my favorite works of cinema.

  • @civy420
    @civy42010 ай бұрын

    This video style reminds me a lot of Tarkovsky's documentary film, "Andrey Tarkovsky. A Cinema Prayer (2019)", the polaroids photo, quoting sentences, and poetic thoughts. A great video to introduce Tarvosky's work.

  • @Nyllsor
    @Nyllsor11 ай бұрын

    Fantastic essay. I love the poem in Stalker 'Now summer has gone', that poem and the movie Stalker helped me come out of a very dark place, finding meaning where i before found none. Thank you for making this essay, i'm very thankful for you doing and sharing this, it's a very beautiful video and edit. Cheers from Sweden! :)

  • @olgai6337
    @olgai63374 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for such observation of such a great director, Andrey Tarkovsky. It is really personal for me, because he was growing near the place where I live. Thanks from Moscow. And he is such a treasure for the whole world of cinematography.

  • @krychickspp2745
    @krychickspp27454 жыл бұрын

    This is my favourite project you've done. It's hard to express the range of emotions I felt watching this. Thank you for all you do. Every video you make is a treasure.

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am crying even more after reading your comment...

  • @mohsinrparkar3407
    @mohsinrparkar34074 жыл бұрын

    I finished my first viewing an hr ago, and have re watched the conclusion (19.40 onward) at least a 100 times now.. So beautifully edited and narrated... created!! Art from a true artist... Thank you..

  • @mohammadbinmahbub9160
    @mohammadbinmahbub91604 жыл бұрын

    i nearly always end up teary after a LSOO video. thank you for the art - the purpose of art.

  • @fiiredark

    @fiiredark

    2 жыл бұрын

    Me tooooooo. OMG. LSOO is killing me softly with his art! I must be some sort of emotional masochist though, because I never want it to stop!

  • @adedotunakande6577
    @adedotunakande65774 жыл бұрын

    One of the best channels hands down. Well done!

  • @TruthSeeker-333
    @TruthSeeker-333 Жыл бұрын

    This was amazing. Tarkovsky’s central themes are Christian redemption, and Hope, and ultimately eternal life

  • @RndmMexican
    @RndmMexican4 жыл бұрын

    Tarkovsky, one of the greats along with Bergman.

  • @ghaithghazi6748

    @ghaithghazi6748

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bergman, Tarkovsky and Kubrick....the holy trinity of cinema.

  • @flw1522
    @flw15224 жыл бұрын

    This is the best content I’ve ever seen on Tarkovski’s work thank you for this

  • @frogonaut5586
    @frogonaut55864 жыл бұрын

    Not many KZread videos make me shed tears. I'm thankful for your content.

  • @saumyaaa2605
    @saumyaaa26053 жыл бұрын

    I don't want to go back to real world after watching your videos. Your videos are truly art. Thank you for making this world little better by making these videos.

  • @thisfoodhits6205
    @thisfoodhits6205Ай бұрын

    I recently watched Nostalgia as my introduction to Tarkovsky, and I haven't stopped thinking of it since. I feel like this video essay so perfectly captures what was so special and captivating about my experience watching that film. It truly touched something deeper in my soul, and this video really helped me understand why and makes me excited to watch more Tarkovsky, but more than that it makes me excited to create my own art. Thank you for this video.

  • @xAMSTERCheshir
    @xAMSTERCheshir4 жыл бұрын

    I've never thought that i will see such video and such comments on the youtube. That's unbelievable. Thank you for this video. It is very deep and it finds great reflection in me (and many others as i can see). I watch the Stalker over and over again, partly or fully. This film gives me calmdown, meditaion, inspiration and feeling that i am truly understood and i am not alone in this world. Sometimes i found myself acting like a stalker my life. Maybe we all are stalkers here in this world, somebody more somebody less. Also i love that you can stop the film at any moment and you wil see the amazing shot, a picture, a piece of art.

  • @hazelhunt3236
    @hazelhunt32364 жыл бұрын

    This was exceptionally brilliant. I felt I was much more able to follow your train of thought with the addition of the text. This whole channel feels like a miracle, something I could only dream of accomplishing in a different body with a lighter soul. Thank you so much.

  • @shaneharrington3655
    @shaneharrington36554 жыл бұрын

    Your work is some of the best on all of KZread.

  • @beinggayontheinternet1570
    @beinggayontheinternet15704 жыл бұрын

    Andrei has been as much my fav as anyone can be for a decent long while now, really put the medium to good and unique use

  • @guygeorgesvoet4177
    @guygeorgesvoet41774 жыл бұрын

    my most emphatic and highest possible praise for this beautiful piece of art in its own right. your editing and commenting are a true critical justice paid in hommage to this immense artist that always upholds our very souls throughout these protracted troubled times. Congratulations again and again and many most heartfelt thanks for this most marvellous effort. God bless you a hundredfold for what you gave.

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    3 жыл бұрын

  • @diogocordsilva
    @diogocordsilva4 жыл бұрын

    It was for essays like this, that essays were created. Magnificent!

  • @yveslatorte7925
    @yveslatorte792517 сағат бұрын

    This aesthetic retrospective is wonderful and only deepens one's sense of the director's film life. I've seen all but the first two, and Andre Rublev alone remains positively gigantic. I had not watched any movies for almost 20 years, so disappointed with what happened in American film. Then one day during covid, during the lockdowns (how funny), on youtube, I watched it free in Russian. The first viewing was all visual astonishment, every shot was a poem writ large with the greatest art eyes of human history. Then there was the soundtrack, whispering in the background, as though literally trickling down from the 14th century in a forgotten tongue. Narrative didn't matter, even though it was (there). Your eyes simply drink delight, moment after moment. He was so careful to keep sound out of the way of the eye, unlike practically all western cinema. The second time I watched Rublev, couldn't have been more different, as you approach this modular method of inventing cinema time while also trying to be faithful to the arrow of actual or real time of history. Rublev winds up being a truly experimental film liberated from conventional procession, all the while it is ruminating on ancient and eternal events. Did Tarkovsky make Rublev or did Rublev "happen", inexplicably, beyond any analysis, as if God Himself had been finally invited (by a human) to show us what a film might look like or attempt, an unsurpassable marriage between order and freedom. Rublev has so many points of orchestration and organization as to defy human engineering. Either Tarkovsky is a genius or he was a kind of savant who allowed the Divine Will to organize his object. There is no other way to explain it. I concur with the gentleman that expressed it might be the greatest movie of all time. It is an immense dive into freedom while unveiling the greatest mystery of man: the Christ of God and facts of human martyrdoms.

  • @hyweledwards-sim2286
    @hyweledwards-sim22864 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful. Love your content. Yet another amazing video. You're probably the best film channel on KZread.

  • @deLumren
    @deLumren4 жыл бұрын

    I can't remember how many subscribers you had when I watched your first video (on Arrival), but seeing that today you have a following of 300k restores my faith in humanity. Your videos are profound in content and neatly edited. Keep on doing your inspirational work! P.S. To anyone who tried one of Tarkovsky films and didn't quite resonate with it - try another! Despite the multitude of common ideas and techniques all his works are very distinct from one another. I personally never connected with Stalker and Rublev, but fell in love with the Mirror.

  • @dingalingmatt
    @dingalingmatt4 жыл бұрын

    Moved me to tears. Beautiful video. Thank you. 💚

  • @thereseschroeder-sheker2414
    @thereseschroeder-sheker24143 жыл бұрын

    I watched your Praying through Cinema this evening. The pacing, editing, choices, reflective insights: what a gift. Your artistry inhabits a masterful ability that is modest and courageous at the same time. Thank you so much MR LSOO --

  • @Sirisun
    @Sirisun4 жыл бұрын

    Welp, I cried. Well done.

  • @keks1krvmel
    @keks1krvmel4 жыл бұрын

    i love him so much. i think so far zerkalo / mirror is my favorite, and it's also the first of his films i ever saw. he's one of the most emotionally moving directors of all time to me, though i can't really explain why bc i'm neither eloquent nor well-versed enough when it comes to cinema. you definitely came closer to putting it into words though. this video is so beautiful.

  • @AEO21Productions
    @AEO21Productions4 жыл бұрын

    Stellar video.. I thank you very much for your time in making this. This level of grasp and poetic communication of Andrei's work is something that the best film schools and professors of the arts are rarely able to match (I can only guess).. so, thank you so much, once again, for gifting us with this informative, yet beautiful presentation.

  • @greensoulsufinur
    @greensoulsufinur4 жыл бұрын

    This was the best one so far. Thank you

  • @AlexLopez-hn5ru
    @AlexLopez-hn5ru4 жыл бұрын

    Watching this on his birthday. Thank you for this video, LSOO. You're an incredible being. He would be pleasantly honored.

  • @headphonezen7155
    @headphonezen71554 жыл бұрын

    Best explanation for art I think I’ve ever heard/seen. Well done.

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes, well said.

  • @pramodchhatre5922
    @pramodchhatre59222 жыл бұрын

    I just keep watching this again and again...

  • @OrangeSunnSet
    @OrangeSunnSet4 жыл бұрын

    Sir, you just made one of the best videos/films which speak about Tarkovsky i have ever watched . So many times you put the things in words i felt while watching Tarkovsky's movies and reading his words in his book/diary in all the years i know them (films, book,diary). Thank you for this video.

  • @subhasishbhattacharjee6316
    @subhasishbhattacharjee63164 жыл бұрын

    Tarkovsky is undoubtedly the greatest poetic director....no one captured natural beauty like him....a fan from #Kolkata #India ♥️

  • @tamerov2387

    @tamerov2387

    4 жыл бұрын

    I love how art connects people all over the world.

  • @Zayhir_thePrince

    @Zayhir_thePrince

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@tamerov2387 same bro, same

  • @elfercho1147
    @elfercho11474 жыл бұрын

    Every time i get a notification from like stories of old it makes my day! Best youtube channel!

  • @nonnobissolum
    @nonnobissolum4 жыл бұрын

    It is absolutely true that your channel is art, and your analysis and commentary refreshingly brilliant. We are fortunate to have you in such proximity. What a privilege to be introduced to such films by way of your channel, films that I might never have otherwise encountered.

  • @khaledwasel2805
    @khaledwasel28053 ай бұрын

    I always come back to this video and it always makes me cry like it's the first time. You're a genius.

  • @MaxV11
    @MaxV114 жыл бұрын

    You made me almost cry. Thank you, this video is simply beautiful.

  • @brushrunner
    @brushrunner4 жыл бұрын

    This was beautifully put together, you and tarkovsky have really warmed my saturday morning, thank you

  • @yomiadejumo
    @yomiadejumo4 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful, as a filmaker i can't help but appreciate the beautiful images this man created in his frames. Thanks for this .

  • @jleviathan9766
    @jleviathan97664 жыл бұрын

    I didnt expect this to touch me that much but it seems to have pressed all the right buttons to turn me into a sobbing mess hahaa... I had an art teacher that I admired infinitely and whom I had connected with on a level that couldn't have been explained with any words. He was an oddball who was shameless about his passion for art and who had a tragically beautiful perspective on life that had particularly marked me and influenced me a lot as a high schooler. I really looked up to him. One of the things he had opened up to me about was how Adrei was one of his own biggest inspirations in life, and although after having seen the movies I was left with an impression I could only describe as out of this world, I was still puzzled over a lot of things and this video cleared up a loooot, and I'm really grateful for that. The wave of understanding that hit me was prob what led me to get this emotional, and now I'm more motivated to go back and find that high school teacher and have a chat about all sorts of nonsense again sometime...

  • @thomassimmons1950
    @thomassimmons19504 жыл бұрын

    Absolute BEAUTY...THANK YOU KIND SIR!!!

  • @petrinacimpeanu6457
    @petrinacimpeanu64574 жыл бұрын

    This was a wonderful representation of Tarkovsky' s work! You're so sensitive and profound and I thank you for this incredible cinematographic journey! I just discovered your channel and I think it is so beautiful and meaningful ❤

  • @LimHeng_Will
    @LimHeng_Will4 жыл бұрын

    Love this video! thanks for showing more of Andrei Tarkovsky films!

  • @Wicus51
    @Wicus514 жыл бұрын

    This is to me a very welcome revelation. Thank you so much. i have seen his films. The first time I watched Stalker, I was bewildered and shattered and shaken by the un-understandable depth. Great. My favourite is Iwan's Youth. It touches me deeply every time I watch. The violence that is always in the background. And the love that shines through. All the time. In every scene.

  • @diegodorantes8418
    @diegodorantes84184 жыл бұрын

    My favorite KZread channel!!!

  • @NiksMolodijs
    @NiksMolodijs4 жыл бұрын

    The way I felt while watching this... I don't think I've ever felt that way before. Thank you

  • @joeyC27
    @joeyC274 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this. A completely underrated director. This video was much needed.

  • @andromeda0918
    @andromeda09184 жыл бұрын

    You deserve a million subscription. You are just too good and you evoke a certain feeling that art does, that movies does for me.

  • @TheCampbellseth
    @TheCampbellseth4 жыл бұрын

    This brought me to tears. I cannot thank you enough

  • @pablohb4
    @pablohb44 жыл бұрын

    You are an artist friend, great video as always! 👋

  • @aritragupta161
    @aritragupta1614 жыл бұрын

    So great of you to name the music used in the background of this video. Tarkovsky's cinema opened up a whole new world of music for me.