Film Review
Andrei Tarkovsky's seventh and final film is, arguably, his most profound
and unsettling. It is work of rugged and sublime poetry that compels
us to look deep into the abyss and lament our failings, both as individuals
and as a species, yet, paradoxically, it contains within it a message of
hope and assures us that the future may not be as grim as we might suppose.
By the time Tarkovsky had completed work on the film he knew that his own
days were numbered - in fact he would die from an untreatable lung cancer
within a few months of the film's release in 1986. (He lived along
enough to see it honoured at the Cannes Film festival, where it won him his
second Jury Grand Prize.) Although he had not intended it to be such
when he began it,
The Sacrifice became Tarkovsky's testamentary film
- an eloquent summation of his work and a final succinct statement of his
deepest felt views on the nature of humanity.
The Sacrifice differs markedly from the director's previous films,
more so in its form than in its typically Tarkovskian themes appertaining
to humanity's raw essence. Whilst it has a few impressionistic digressions
- most memorably two stark and frighteningly eerie dream sequences - and
employs visual symbolism throughout, these are far less apparent than in
earlier work. With its muted palette (colour reduced almost to monochrome
for most of the film) and minimalist, almost theatrical staging,
The Sacrifice
is much nearer in style to the works of Tarkovsky's equally revered
contemporary, Ingmar Bergman.
This was perhaps inevitable given that
the film was made in Sweden, with two of Bergman's most important collaborators
- the actor Erland Josephson and cinematographer Sven Nykvist - lending their
fulsome support to the project. Tarkovsky's careful imitation of Bergman
appears deliberate - the scene in which the main character and his entourage
fall to pieces on hearing the news that WWIII has suddenly broken out could
easily have been scripted and staged by Bergman - but what is remarkable
is how, in incorporating Bergman's familiar tropes into his own distinctive
asthetic, Tarkovsky manages to create something even more beguiling and disturbing.
Even in his unique body of work,
The Sacrifice stands out as
an exceptional piece of film art.
In common with the director's other great films -
Solaris and
Stalker in particular -
The Sacrifice
is a masterfully woven parable that captivates the eye and stimulates the
intellect. It begins slowly, with a single shot lasting almost ten
minutes, filmed entirely in long shot, the camera panning across a bleak
Scandinavian setting with balletic ease, but with this strange opening showing
an old man and a little boy planting a tree together the film at once exerts
a powerful hold over the spectator. It is an alluring poem that can be interpreted
in whatever way you will, and this is what makes it Tarkovsky's most profound
and fascinating creation.
In common with much of the director's work,
The Sacrifice has a substantial auto-biographical
element, the central character Alexander (played with exquisite subtlety
and power by Erland Josephson) mirroring Tarkovsky not only in his physical
appearance and temperament, but also in his tortured concerns for mankind
and striving for the deeper truths of existence. Alexander's pact with God - to give
up everything he has so that the world can avoid obliteration - resonates
with the director's desire to make a success of his career after turning
his back on the Soviet Union. Central to Tarkovsky's thesis is the
idea that, for it to be meaningful, sacrifice must be voluntary and it must hurt.
There is, to coin a phrase, no gain without pain.
On the face of it, Alexander's willed-for sacrifice is monstrous and equates
to the Jewish patriarch Abraham's willingness to slaughter his own son Isaac
to show his obedience to his God. But who wouldn't make such an extreme
vow when faced with the prospect of impending global annihilation?
In the end, Alexander is spared a father's ultimate loss and is merely robbed
of his reason and his material possessions - but the point is made.
The sacrifice is more than a token gesture, it is a sacred rite wherby one
human being voluntarily gives up something he cherishes in order to restore
balance to a troubled universe.
This leads us to perhaps the most obvious interpretation of the film (one
that naturally aligns with Tarkovsky's own anti-materialistic and pacifistic
views) - namely, that the only way by which humanity can avoid the Apocalypse
is to
collectively will things to be different, by rejecting en masse
those destructive influences (materialism, nationalism, militarism) that appeal to
our baser instincts but make the survival of the species impossible.
Through the tortured disintegration of his alter ego, Tarkovsky makes his
case with dazzling lucidity and asserts his confidence that mankind will,
in the end, make the right choice, painful though it might be.
Tarkovsky's extraordinarily refined poetic instincts, as ever, prevent him
from allowing even this logical interpretation of his film seem too obvious.
The director's tendency to obfuscate even the simplest of ideas and force
us to reflect on the film from multiple angles is apparent in the ambiguity
of his central protagonist. Alexander is as opaque and multi-faceted
as any other fictional character you'd care to name, and we can never be sure whether
he is a willing martyr, a latterday Faust or merely a deluded fool. The connection
with Prince Myshkin in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's
The Idiot is easily made,
and in the film's final cataclysmic sequence it suddenly dawns on us that
Alexander may not even be sane.
In fact, as we replay the events of the film back in our heads after this scene
(which manages to be both horrific and hilarious with its Bunuelian undertones)
it becomes apparent that what we have witnessed is not one man's heroic act of atonement but rather a skewed
fantasy oozing out of a mind collapsing under the weight of a crushing exaggerated
pessimism. How else are we to account for the ease with which supernatural
elements blend into the narrative - the idea that sexual congress with a
supposed witch can prevent a nuclear exchange? Is Alexander really
the man who saved the world, or is he just a worn-out misanthropic intellectual
at the end of his tether, imagining the worst and then casting himself in
the role of humanity's saviour - the man who stopped Armageddon? Andrei Tarkovsky's
last film is a canny but cruel enigma, one that encompasses our deepest fears
and our most fervent hopes.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Alexander is a man in his early sixties who leads a tranquil existence with
his wife Adelaide, stepdaughter Marta and young son in a large house by the
sea on a remote island. A former actor, now turned critic and lecturer,
Alexander bemoans the way the world is going and has scant confidence in
what the future holds for mankind. On his birthday, he plants a tree
in a remote spot with his son, whom he refers to as Little Man. That
evening, whilst enjoying a convivial birthday party with his wife and two
friends - the local postman Otto and the family doctor Victor - news comes
through on the radio that war has broken out and that the end is inevitable.
Overcome with despair, Alexander confides in God that he will give up everything,
including his beloved wife and son, if the impending catastrophe can be avoided.
Otto then tells the ex-actor that there is one last hope. If he goes
to his maid Maria, who is apparently a witch, and sleeps with her the nuclear
holocaust will be averted. Seeing this as his one chance, Alexander
slips away from his house and makes his way to Maria's isolated homestead.
With the sound of jet fighters roaring overhead, a prelude to the imminent
nuclear conflict, the old man breaks down in front of his maid. Maria
is moved to tears by Alexander's obvious distress and, to console him, she
allows him to make love to her. The next morning, Alexander awakes
to find the world back as it was. It seems that God has heeded his
prayer. All that remains is for him to keep his part of the bargain...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.