My spouse and I have been watching movies that our youngest son is watching in his film analysis class, and while the vast majority of them have been quite interesting, I confess that I really do not get this one. It was shown during the week that they were learning about cinematography, and the cinematography is spectacular--it is shot all in black and white, there are largely just 2 characters, one horse, one modest stone farm, and a windy desolate landscape to work with, so it is especially remarkable. This seemed to fit better with the segment on boredom and the whole 'slow movie' movement--it was certainly more lively than an Andy Warhol movie of the Empire State building (4 hours of film on a building that more or less does nothing). Okay, this has more going on than that, but not by orders of magnitude. Béla Tarr is known as a slow film guy, with a previous work that clocks in at 450 minutes, and I am going out on a limb here, but I am betting not a chase scene to be found.
Here is a story, told in 6 days, of a man, his daughter, and their horse who live a meager existence. One boiled potato a day. No eating utensils. Warm clothes, brandy, and a beautifully built stone house are their luxuries--heat and food are not. Soon they lose even water. Then fire. Then light. The end.
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