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Sátántangó

  • 1994
  • T
  • 7h 19min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,2/10
13.348
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Sátántangó (1994)
Guarda Trailer [OVS]
Riproduci trailer2: 46
1 video
68 foto
Period DramaPsychological DramaDrama

Alla vigilia di un grande pagamento, i residenti di una fattoria collettiva che sta crollando vedono i loro piani trasformarsi in desolazione quando scoprono che Irimiás, un ex collega che p... Leggi tuttoAlla vigilia di un grande pagamento, i residenti di una fattoria collettiva che sta crollando vedono i loro piani trasformarsi in desolazione quando scoprono che Irimiás, un ex collega che pensavano fosse morto, torna nella comunità.Alla vigilia di un grande pagamento, i residenti di una fattoria collettiva che sta crollando vedono i loro piani trasformarsi in desolazione quando scoprono che Irimiás, un ex collega che pensavano fosse morto, torna nella comunità.

  • Regia
    • Béla Tarr
  • Sceneggiatura
    • László Krasznahorkai
    • Mihály Vig
    • Péter Dobai
  • Star
    • Mihály Vig
    • Putyi Horváth
    • László feLugossy
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,2/10
    13.348
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Béla Tarr
    • Sceneggiatura
      • László Krasznahorkai
      • Mihály Vig
      • Péter Dobai
    • Star
      • Mihály Vig
      • Putyi Horváth
      • László feLugossy
    • 82Recensioni degli utenti
    • 58Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Trailer [OVS]
    Trailer 2:46
    Trailer [OVS]

    Foto68

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    Interpreti principali37

    Modifica
    Mihály Vig
    • Irimiás
    Putyi Horváth
    • Petrina
    • (as Dr. Putyi Horváth)
    László feLugossy
    • Schmidt
    Éva Almássy Albert
    • Schmidtné
    • (as Éva Almási Albert)
    János Derzsi
    János Derzsi
    • Kráner
    Irén Szajki
    • Kránerné
    Alfréd Járai
    • Halics
    Miklós Székely B.
    Miklós Székely B.
    • Futaki
    Erzsébet Gaál
    • Halicsné
    György Barkó
    • Iskolaigazgató
    Zoltán Kamondi
    Zoltán Kamondi
    • Kocsmáros
    Barna Mihók
    • Kerekes
    Péter Dobai
    • Százados
    András Bodnár
    • Horgos Sanyi
    Erika Bók
    Erika Bók
    • Estike
    Peter Berling
    Peter Berling
    • Orvos
    Ica Bojár
    • Horgosné
    Gyula Pauer
    • Regia
      • Béla Tarr
    • Sceneggiatura
      • László Krasznahorkai
      • Mihály Vig
      • Péter Dobai
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti82

    8,213.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10mheuermann

    Nearly eight hours of pure bliss

    This is my favorite film of all time and its such a pity that it gets screened so rarely, but who can blame the cinemas as not too many people are prepared to take Tarr's advice and call in sick in order to spend eight hours at the movies instead of going to work. Also, I reckon this is one of the very few films you actually have to see on a big screen, so even if it was available on DVD, it wouldn't do much good. I've seen it three times so far and I got blown away every single time. So I really urge you to give it a go if this epic masterpiece comes anywhere near you. First time I saw it was on the Berlin Film Festival in 94 and I have to admit I wasn't really prepared to sit through the whole thing, but after three hours I was completely hooked and when the credits finally rolled in, I was rather sad that it was over. I would have liked to spend another few hours in this strange and compelling world. OK, the plot in itself is kinda depressing and bearing in mind that it runs for so many hours, not that much happens, but to complain about the absence of jolly dialog and action packed stunts would be completely beside the point. You just have to be willing to go along with Tarr's approach and once you accept that storytelling here is a bit different to what you are used to, the whole thing it is more exciting, entertaining and gripping than everything you've ever seen. Tarr's main achievement in my view is that he creates a completely new form of imagery and its so utterly convincing that I still wonder why it never caught on big time. Instead of editing the takes into a scene during post production, he shots almost everything in one go with the help of a steady cam. As the takes are as long as 7 minutes (just a spirited guess, I never timed them) and involve occasionally more than 9 actors its just utterly amazing how Tarr choreographs actors and camera in a way that it seems perfectly natural and you get to see exactly what you need to see. Well its pretty hard to explain if you haven't seen it as it really is so different from everything else. What can I tell you? Every single frame is aesthetically a revelation, thus making this an utter delight from start to finish. I could harp on endlessly about why I love this film so much. About the absolutely convincing atmosphere, the great acting, the inventive use of lighting, how the story unfolds, the subtle use of humor, but as it is with all great love affairs, words fail to even hint at the magnificence of Sátántangó. Go, see and believe.
    10zsengezsolt

    A short movie which lasts 7.5 hours

    This is one of the greatest movies I've seen, as the film is not boring and tiring during more than seven hours. The beautiful long shots about this deserted country-side and it's people are so rich, that they crucially contribute to the understanding of the story. When we see somebody walking for ten minutes in the forest we have the possibility to know all his/her life. In order to understand the plot it's not enough to listen to dialogues and pay attention to the classical narrative elements. You have to contemplate and study every image, the gestures, the cloth, the environment. The long shots allow also us also to include in the film's perception our own experiences of the world. We understand the events based on our own experiences: we have the time to remember what is it like walking in mud, touching a cat, etc. If you let yourself taught by director Béla Tarr, your perception will change in 1 or 2 hours, and you will be able to feel and understand images much more deeper than before. Don't miss it!
    9YellowManReanimated

    A representation of purgatory

    Although the inspiration is clear, there is no film quite like Sátántangó. Building on the vision and style of Andrei Tarkovsky, in this film, Tarr attempts to create a completely different experience of cinematic time. The best way of illustrating this is with this fact: the average time between cuts in a typical Hollywood film is 2.5 seconds, the average time between cuts in this film is 2.5 minutes. The shots are complex, they travel through landscapes, they track along buildings, they typically settle on closed doors or zoom into characters' backs. The screen often becomes filled with blackness; the viewer is like a curious child waiting for movement, waiting for the opportunity to see again. Until, eventually, he is able to see again, and he is grateful for the return of his vision. With each shot, the film is redefining and developing the viewer's perception of cinematic time and space.

    If it seems I'm focusing too much on how the film is composed as opposed to what the film is about, there's a reason for that: it's not so easy to discern exactly what the plot of the film is. It's set in a Hungarian village. The villagers have acquired money and are considering betraying one another. There is a mysterious prodigal son, who has a preternatural hold over the villagers and manipulates them seemingly at his will. Police officers are involved and there is a potential spy-element taking place within the narrative but, essentially, the plot is secondary to the way in which the film represents sheer experience. The experience of the life of various villagers is presented unedited, unfiltered. There are long scenes involving a disturbed, neglected child and her abused cat; there's a drunken, reclusive doctor; there are drunken villages dancing an inebriated, tortured tango.

    The film, for all of its representation of everyday experience, never feels like a documentary or even cinema verité. There's a jagged quality to the film, something foreboding and nightmarish. It feels constantly unsettling and is captivating as a result. The way in which the film blends the quotidian and the surreal is utterly unique. Yes, once again, it is clearly inspired by Tarkovsky's work, but the film takes this in a new direction, a direction which seeks to blend artifice and experience to the point where the gap between the two becomes indiscernible.

    Oh, by the way, did I mention that it's 7-hours long...
    10sprengerguido

    It grows!

    I saw SATANTANGO about ten years ago. At that time, I found it impressive, but quite an ordeal to sit through. But then, years later, I realized I kept thinking back to the images and rhythms of this film. It grows. I also saw other very long movies with very long takes, like TAIGA by Ulrike Ottinger (8 hours) and FROST by Tarr's student Fred Kelemen (4 hours); they didn't work. SATANTANGO stayed with me, like two other films by Tarr, DAMNATION and WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES. Today I consider it as one of the greatest movie experiences I ever had. I do not know how Tarr pulls this off; his most effective takes often seem simple and straightforward. It must be magic. By the way, Gus Van Sant's ELEPHANT uses similar techniques at times (long shots of people walking), and Van Sant acknowledged Tarr's influence.
    10MacAindrais

    Plodding and Plodding and Plodding along

    Satantango (1994) ****

    Satantango, Bela Tarr's 1994 7.5 hour masterpiece is incredible first and foremost in that despite its length and multiple shots of literally nothing taking place it is never, I repeat, never boring. This is one of the most incredible films I have ever seen. Complied of only 150 shots, many of which last for over 10 minutes, Tarr and his cinematographer manage to create a hypnotic and beautiful depiction of a desolated communal farm in post-communism Hungary. The scenery is at once withered and ugly, yet compellingly beautiful. The land is muddy and the buildings are in shambles. There are two scenes where main characters walk with the camera following as multitudes of trash blow along with them in the wind, creating a somehow hypnotic effect.

    The film opens with literally a 10 minute shot following a herd of cows wandering through a seemingly rundown farm town. The camera makes what has to be one of the most incredible pans in cinematic history panning to the left for most of the ten minute scene. Who else but Bela Tarr would try such a thing; and who else but Bela Tarr could make it work so well.

    The film follows the people of the farm in essentially three sections. The first section begins by showing Futaki having an affair with Schmidt's wife. Schmidt we find out is planning to run away with the money the town has made over the past year but comes home and is confronted by Futaki who has suck out only to come right back and knock on the door. They hear that the smooth talking Irimias and his sidekick Patrina, who have been believed dead by the town, are on their way back to town. The other residents, who all plan to take their money and leave town, seem to be under the thumb of Irimias and after hearing of his return meet at the local pub and discuss what to do and wait nervously for Irimias's arrival.

    The scenes are broken down into 12 steps, such as in a Tango. Nearly all of which are connected in that we see what has already happened from another perspective. The first section as noted involves Schmidt and Futaki; the second and one of the most hypnotic in the film is of an overweight and frail doctor who sits in front of his window documenting the actions of the townspeople. He details how Futaki is slipping out of Schmidt's house, and then goes back in, a scene which we've already seen except this time it's from the window of the doctor's house. The doctor hulks around and then realizes he must leave his home to get more alcohol. Scenes go on like this weaving in out and out the story line from different points of view. The first third of the film deals with the realization of Irimias' return, and exposes the corruption of the citizen's capitalism by their greed. The second third is the post powerful. It documents a little girl who is conned by her brother and ignored by her mother. The only thing she has power over is her cat, and in order to feel that superiority she tortures and poisons the cat. I will not reveal how, but this section turns to tragedy which will be exploited by the smooth talking Irimias.

    The final third deals with the corruption of Irimias's communist plan for the farm. He convinces them to give him the power and all the money that has been saved up only to con them. This section is brooding with satire, as is the first in some ways, and has shades of Orwell's animal farm – the dumb and obedient townspeople conned into subjugation by the charming Irimias.

    Essentially, Satantango is a 2 hour movie shown without its cuts bringing it to 7.5 hours. The film never uses its drawn out scenes to further the narrative, but neither does it use them for simply aesthetic purposes either. The film's length and incredibly long shots seem to be rubbing the atmosphere right in our nose. Many shots have the camera move, raising and weaving and circling defining space like no other film. Some of the extended scenes are incredibly funny in bizarre ways, such as an extended dance seen (from which the film gets its title) where the villagers get drunk waiting for Irimias and Patrina, dancing to accordion music while the little girl peers in through the window; and another scene that circles the room while two officers dictate and type out Irimias's statement, cleverly changing vulgar statements (which I found hilarious) and in the middle of it all, sitting down and having a snack in real time! These scenes sound perhaps boring, but somehow Tarr makes them seem riveting and when they end it's almost sad to see it. Another incredible extended sequence sees the camera facing down at the sleeping villagers circling them ever so slowing as a narrator describes their dreams.

    Satantango is a film like no other. Its scope is breathtaking and its style is beautifully crafted. Tarr's films are almost like ballets: the camera moves always gracefully and in ways that we would only imagine that a cut was necessary, never faltering and always creating incredibly beautiful dances, and they set a mood perhaps better than anyone else. Satantango is Tarr's masterwork, epic in every sense of the word. If you get the chance to see this one, do yourself a favor and experience all 7 and a half hours of its majestic and drab atmosphere. Satantango is film for the sake of film and art for the sake of art.

    4/4

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      The film, like many of Béla Tarr's films, contains one of the longest average shot lengths in any motion picture: 145.7 seconds. A single long take approximately 4 hours into the movie lasts an incredible 10 minutes, 14 seconds.
    • Citazioni

      Futaki: I shouldn't drink. When I do I keep thinking of coffins.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Storia del cinema: Un'odissea: Post-War Cinema (2011)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 28 aprile 1994 (Ungheria)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Ungheria
      • Germania
      • Svizzera
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Lingua
      • Ungherese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Satantango
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Hortobágy, Ungheria(location)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Mozgókép Innovációs Társulás és Alapítvány
      • Von Vietinghoff Filmproduktion (VVF)
      • Vega Film
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      7 ore 19 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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