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Parajanov's Mythic Quest For Love

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  • Parajanov's Mythic Quest For Love

    PARAJANOV'S MYTHIC QUEST FOR LOVE
    By Nicolas Rapold

    New York Sun, NY
    http://www.nysun.com/article/65597
    Oct 31 2007

    For much of the 1970s, the legendary director Sergei Parajanov
    (1924-90) was imprisoned as a punishment for the crime of making
    mind-blowing movies. That's the impression you get, at any rate, after
    experiencing "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors," the filmmaker's 1964
    breakthrough, which begins a week-long run today at the BAMcinematek,
    at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. This folk fever dream, seemingly
    possessed by pagan magic and infused with nonstop native music, roils
    with the all-consuming passion of its story about a shepherd, Ivan
    (Ivan Mikolajchuk), whose beloved Marichka (Larisa Kadochnikova) dies.

    In the decade that followed the release of the film, Soviet
    apparatchiks harassed the Ukrainian-born Armenian director endlessly,
    accusing Parajanov of provincial nationalism, torpedoing his
    subsequent films, and eventually jailing him in 1973, five years
    after his magnificent 1968 imagining of the Armenian artist Sayat
    Nova, "The Color of Pomegranates," which many consider his crowning
    achievement. Possessing both empathetic dedication to each movie's
    terrain and a vigor of expression to match, the flamboyant, fearless
    director posed a threat by unleashing an artistic and spiritual force
    that was more basic and potent than ideology.

    Filmed among the Gutsuls in Ukraine's Carpathian mountains, "Shadows
    of Forgotten Ancestors" has the pith and immediacy of so many muscular
    lines of folk poetry. Ivan's childhood is a rough-and-tumble overture:
    a tree in a snowy forest that lays low a man; a lunging village idiot
    amid peasants resplendent in tunics; heady wanderings through an
    Orthodox church mid-ritual. Ivan's joyous courtship with Marichka
    despite a family feud is a bucolic apotheosis: As they spin each
    other around in a field, the low camera angle makes a single daisy
    flit in and out of eclipsing the sun.

    The season comes for Ivan to summer with the shepherds, but lovelorn
    Marichka seeks him out and tragically slips down a rockface. To this
    point, the film's earthy and ruddy tones and bristling mobile camera
    are startlingly alive, like a color photograph of a time before time.

    But with Marichka's death, Parajanov plunges the film - and Ivan -
    into dolorous grays and heavy action that bursts into mania and
    devolves into daze.

    The colors return when Ivan rehitches with a buxom, heavily sensuous
    peasant girl, Palagna (Tatyana Bestayeva), but when the babies
    don't come, the heavy-lidded eroticism shifts to a literally haunted
    vacancy. Parajanov's sense for the culture's magic becomes palpable
    when Palagna consults a grabby sorcerer. The supernatural element that
    thrums throughout the film, drawing on pagan and orthodox energies
    and bewitching song and dance, feels unified with daily life until
    it falls unhinged in these moments of disorder and desperation.

    >From the first otherworldly moans of peasant alpine horns, music keeps
    "Shadows" grounded and mythic at the same time. There's more singing,
    twanging, keening, clattering, and stomping than dialogue.

    Like makers of other ethnic cine-portraits, Parajanov knew to find
    the heartbeat of a people in its sound and music, and even in the
    restive crackling of a rangy fire.

    Besides the power of his art, his empathy for native Ukrainian culture
    was what irked Soviet authorities, who envisioned one monolithic
    Soviet people. "Shadows" renders Carpathian custom, costume, and
    music as fully and richly as a documentary, without ever feeling
    like one. Like Pasolini eliciting grace from the masses, Parajanov is
    never an observer gathering material. He took a different tack from
    even his Ukrainian predecessor, the legendary silent-film director
    Alexander Dovzhenko, who shot waving grain and sturdy peasants with
    pistonlike montage and framing, and a worker-friendly ethos.

    Parajanov had in fact studied under Dovzhenko at VGIK, the renowned
    Moscow film school. Bracketing his influences was his avowed object
    of admiration, the director Andrei Tarkovsky, who was younger by
    10 years. You can see an affinity between the one-two pairs of
    Tarkovsky's ruralist "Ivan's Childhood" and artist epic "Andrei
    Rublev," and Parajanov's "Shadows" and "Color of Pomegranates."

    A coda to the passion of "Shadows" is the violent echo of its
    family-feud rumblings in Parajanov's early life: His first wife was
    murdered for marrying a foreigner. And Soviet life was obviously
    a struggle; even his release from the gulags came only after
    international pressure, with blacklisting constant. But two more films
    followed, and Parajanov spoke of going to America to adapt Longfellow's
    "Song of Hiawatha." In that resilience, and in "Shadows of Forgotten
    Ancestors," you get the sense of the filmmaker's spirit in every shot.
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