Event Information
WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES
Saturday, Jun 10, 2023 12:15 PM
Introduction from film critic Jason Shawhan
Dirs. Béla Tarr and Ágnes Hranitzky | Hungary | 2000 | 145 min. | NR | 4K DCP Restoration
In Hungarian with English subtitles
Event Pricing
General Admission General Admission - $13.50
General Admission Senior - $11.50
General Admission Child - $11.50
General Admission Military/K-12 Teacher (w/ID) - $11.50
General Admission Group Sale - $12.50

 
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Part of Weekend Classics

One of the major achievements of 21st century cinema thus far, Béla Tarr’s mesmeric parable of societal collapse is an enigma of transcendent visual, philosophical and mystical resonance. Adapted from a novel by the celebrated writer and frequent Tarr collaborator László Krasznahorkai, WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES unfolds in an unknown era in an unnamed village, where, one day, a mysterious circus — complete with an enormous stuffed whale and a shadowy, demagogue-like figure known as the Prince — arrives and appears to awaken a kind of madness in the citizens, which builds inexorably toward violence and destruction. In 39 of his signature long takes, engraved in ghostly black and white, Tarr conjures an apocalyptic vision of dreamlike dread and fathomless beauty.

Coming six years after Tarr’s sprawling SATANTANGO, WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES boasts a remarkable script, devastating performances, rich B&W cinematography, and a stirring score by frequent collaborator/actor/composer Mihaly Vig. Presented here in a new 4K restoration, the deep contrast of the chiaroscuro images and the luminescence of the ashen ones are restored — an enhancement that serves Tarr’s signature transcendent style.

“A totally sustained immersion in the magisterially bleak, voluptuously monochromatic, undeniably beautiful universe of muddy villages and cell-like rooms… Each cut is an event." - J. Hoberman, Village Voice 

“Tarr’s precise yet effortless command of the long take is so transcendent as to suggest the presence of God — every stoppage point within each shot akin to a heavenly composite of the film’s collective whole, as Gabor Medvigy’s camera delicately roams and collects the light and shadow that suffocates the film’s existential terrain.” —Ed Gonzalez, Slant