Screening: Elem Klimov’s “Farewell”

  • Событие прошло

Screening: Elem Klimov’s “Farewell”

Sat, 14 October6 : 00 PM

A screening of “Farewell” by Elem Klimov at The Rotherhithe Russian Cinema Club.

Elem Klimov is responsible for nearly all that we see in Proshchanie, which Ukrainian-born Larisa Shepitko did not live to complete. Based on Valentin Rasputin’s 1976 novel Proshchanie s Matyoroy, Klimov’s labor of love for his wife, who died along with crew members in a road accident, is a tremendous achievement—even though Klimov indulges his penchant for weirdness, caricature and cruelty, thereby disturbing the film’s delicate spiritual roots. Klimov felt he had sacrificed his style for Shepitko’s, but her superstititousness, which Shepitko shared with her elderly protagonist, Darya, created a bond with the material that her widower could not duplicate.
Matyoroy is a remote Siberian island village. The state has determined it must yield to progress; the island will be flooded for the sake of the construction of a hydro-electric dam, the villagers uprooted and relocated to impersonal urban apartments. Some, however, choose to stay behind.
The opening movement is phenomenal. At night the tree-cutters traverse the dark, moon-dappled water to reach the island. We do not see these strangely garbed invaders, only the water with its play of light; the angled camera fools us into thinking that the camera is directly—flat— overhead. The journey thus seems, visually, a climb, an ascendency—but isn’t. At dawn, when the invaders arrive, the perspective also makes the crude dock seem like something that the camera is scaling. These distortions provide commentary on the unnaturalness of the invaders’ mission. Their obscene laughter as they later tackle the job of felling an immense tree perhaps goes too far. Indeed, it is annoyingly convenient that Darya’s own son is charged with the responsibility of directing the crew that prepares the island for its “progressive” fate.

Free, donations are welcomed.

Picture source

Find Events

AugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecemberJanuaryFebruary
Wed27
Thu28
Fri29
Sat30
Sun31
Mon01
Tue02
Wed03
Thu04
Fri05
Sat06
Sun07
Mon08
Tue09
Wed10
Thu11
Fri12
Sat13
Sun14
Mon15
Tue16
Wed17
Thu18
Fri19
Sat20
Sun21
Mon22
Tue23
Wed24
Thu25
Fri26
Sat27
Sun28
Mon29
Tue30
Wed01
Thu02
Fri03
Sat04
Sun05
Mon06
Tue07
Wed08
Thu09
Fri10
Sat11
Sun12
Mon13
Tue14
Wed15
Thu16
Fri17
Sat18
Sun19
Mon20
Tue21
Wed22
Thu23
Fri24
Sat25
Sun26
Mon27
Tue28
Wed29
Thu30
Fri31
Sat01
Sun02
Mon03
Tue04
Wed05
Thu06
Fri07
Sat08
Sun09
Mon10
Tue11
Wed12
Thu13
Fri14
Sat15
Sun16
Mon17
Tue18
Wed19
Thu20
Fri21
Sat22
Sun23
Mon24
Tue25
Wed26
Thu27
Fri28
Sat29
Sun30
Mon01
Tue02
Wed03
Thu04
Fri05
Sat06
Sun07
Mon08
Tue09
Wed10
Thu11
Fri12
Sat13
Sun14
Mon15
Tue16
Wed17
Thu18
Fri19
Sat20
Sun21
Mon22
Tue23
Wed24
Thu25
Fri26
Sat27
Sun28
Mon29
Tue30
Wed31
Thu01
Fri02
Sat03
Sun04
Mon05
Tue06
Wed07
Thu08
Fri09
Sat10
Sun11
Mon12
Tue13
Wed14
Thu15
Fri16
Sat17
Sun18
Mon19
Tue20
Wed21
Thu22
Fri23
Sat24
Sun25
Mon26
Tue27
Wed28
Thu29
Fri30
Sat31
Sun01
Mon02
Tue03
Wed04
Thu05
Fri06
Sat07
Sun08
Mon09
Tue10
Wed11
Thu12
Fri13
Sat14
Sun15
Mon16
Tue17
Wed18
Thu19
Fri20
Sat21
Sun22
Mon23
Tue24
Wed25
Thu26
Fri27
Sat28
error: Content is protected !!