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Arts

Issue — September 12, 2007

Béla Tarr: Mysterious Harmonies

By John Behling

Image by Photo courtesy of Béla Tarr

There's a scene in Béla Tarr's Werkmeister Harmonies in which an enormous shipping crate sits ominously in the city square. The camera follows a man as he circles it, capturing the blank stares of other locals until finally—and very slowly—the door to the container opens and a man emerges, sets up a ticket counter, and waits for the first customer. In a perfectly surreal world, the Walker's retrospective of this Hungarian master would begin with the director himself stepping forward from a mysterious shipping container. Alas, we'll have to settle for the Walker's stage, which Tarr will grace for a Regis dialogue with critic Howard Feinstein to kick off the center's career-spanning retrospective. Debuting with the equally caustic and claustrophobic portrait of socialist discontent, 1979's Family Nest (September 21), the director rose to international notoriety with a trilogy of long-form art-house favorites including 2000's Werkmeister Harmonies (October 6 and 12), 1988's Damnation (October 5), and 1994's seven-and-a-half-hour Satantango (October 13). Though Tarr's time-melting experiments may seem vulnerable to the criticism of spectacle over substance, conceit over content, his films are actually very intimate. Tarr shows us the cut-scenes of life, the moments between lines of dialogue, the hours that pass between life-changing events. By filming these epic feats of the ordinary, Tarr brings the existential white noise to a shattering crescendo—and then he takes it up a notch. Walker Art Center, 1750 Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis; 612.375.7600. Sept 14 dialogue, retrospective Sept 12-Oct 21.

From the Author Archive
John Behling
The War: A Ken Burns Film — (Sep 5, 2007)
Innocence is Bliss — Director Mike Mills thinks like a kid for 'Thumbsucker' (Sep 28, 2005)
The Tricky Master — Stephen Chow sells classic action anew in 'Hustle' (Apr 20, 2005)
Hiroshima, Mon Ammo — The smoking gun is a mushroom cloud in Fukasaku's 'Yakuza' (Dec 8, 2004)
More Fall Arts Articles
Graffiti artist 27 steps out of the shadows and into the galleries (Sep 12, 2007)
For 30 years, Lou Bellamy has run the nation’s preeminent African American theater. But what a theater critic really wants to know is: How’s his golf game? (Sep 12, 2007)
After a life-changing accident, performer and author Kevin Kling will never tell another tale the same way again (Sep 12, 2007)
After 15 years, James Sewell Ballet still thrives on the unexpected (Sep 12, 2007)
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October 2; Walker Art Center; 612.375.7600. (Sep 12, 2007)
November 16; First Avenue; 612.332.1775 (Sep 12, 2007)
More >>
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