Stalker

Stalker
by Andrei Tarkovsky

Stalker
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DVD details

Actor: Aleksandr Kaidanovsky, Alisa Frejndlikh, Anatoli Solonitsyn, Natasha Abramova, Nikolai Grinko
Director: Andrei Tarkovsky
Cinematographer: Aleksandr Knyazhinsky
Cinematographer: Georgi Rerberg
Cinematographer: Leonid Kalashnikov
Writer: Andrei Tarkovsky
Editor: Lyudmila Feiginova
Producer: Aleksandra Demidova
Producer: Willie Geller
Writer: Arkadi Strugatsky
Writer: Boris Strugatsky
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: Russian (Original Language), Dolby Digital 1.0; English (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); German (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Italian (Subtitled); Portuguese (Subtitled); Swedish (Subtitled); Chinese (Subtitled); Russian (Subtitled); Dutch (Subtitled); Arabic (Subtitled); Japanese (Subtitled)
Format: Color, Digital Video Transfer, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Subtitled
Picture Format: 1.33:1
Running Time: 163 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2002-10-15
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Studio: Image Entertainment

DVD Reviews of Stalker

DVD Review: A lost classic
Summary: 5 Stars

When we proselytize science fiction to our friends, this film is always among the first three we show. ;-) It's definitely one of our favorite cinema pieces of all time, even if our viewings have to be partitioned out over one or two evenings (it is rather long...). Like good science fiction, it is unconfined to the genre. In fact, it has often been the topic of theological discussion. It's one of the more beautiful and complex pieces that has been put to film. Gotta love Russian literature...

DVD Review: Its worthed
Summary: 5 Stars

This is a great film by Tarkovsky, I love it! It's different from anything else ever made, but still leaves great impression. I think its difficult (or impossible) to understand it from the first time, it might seem boring and without sense. But don't give up :-), after reading the book and the 2nd watching I was so impressed. Every scene is great as a photography, and the lyrics by Arseniy Tarkovsky are very powerful.
The only minus is the music in some parts, and I'm not sure if it was the same in the original film.

DVD Review: Must love Solaris
Summary: 5 Stars

Having finally come to love Solaris, I set out to watch other Tarkovsky films. This being one of his other most popular, and also a science fiction tale, it was decreed to be next. We open with a slow reveal of a grimy room in sepia photography--even now we can marvel at the richness and texture of the images. After some loooong credits, a quote from a fictitious Nobel Prize winner about The Zone: No one knows whether it was caused by a meteorite or was created by aliens, but it is acknowledged as a miracle. Originally they sent in police to investigate, but they never returned. Since then The Zone has been cordoned off and all access forbidden. It is said that in the room at the center of The Zone one's innermost wish will come true. This has led to the employ of Stalkers, people who lead others in for money, but never enter the room. By the way, the word "stalker" is meant in its original sense, that is, one who approaches something very carefully and steadily.

So the camera slowly enters a room where a couple is sleeping. We pan at a glacial pace left across the sleeping couple, then slowly back. The man wakes and tries to slip out, but his wife wakes and berates him for leaving again. She says he's addicted to The Zone, isn't thinking of her and their daughter--who was born with defects as stalkers' children often are--and will be sent be sent back to prison. He replies that to him, everywhere is a prison. He leaves, and his wife falls to the floor, writhing in a highly sensual emotional agony.

A couple waits by a nasty shipyard. The man, who we'll know as the Writer, complains that everything in life is so boring and he has lost his engagement with reality long ago. Again, the photography is gorgeous and impeccably composed: for example, look at the frame below. You have the couple in front of this beautiful jumble of old ships in the distant mist, with a tree dividing the frame toward the left. Much of the movie is just unbelievably gorgeous like this, with shots as composed, rich and textured as paintings. The first part of the movie also lays out this reality as a dank, nasty, polluted nightmare world.
The stalker takes the Writer to meet the Professor, the other guy he'll be escorting into the Zone today. The Writer, who, it must be said, is a trifle bitter, makes a speech about how a treasured antique in a museum might have been just a slop bowl when it was produced and used, and defrauded "all those connoisseurs." Yep, life is dead to him--and he won't shut up about it. The Writer is also cut off from life and unable to write. So this happy bunch set off in a jeep to enter the zone and have their wish fulfilled [I want a pony!] and maybe find something to live for again.

They drive through this incredibly evocative deserted industrial city--they obviously have some super-powerful fog machines at their disposal--while the Writer shares his many thoughts on how life totally sucks. I used to think I was bitter. They spot a train being let into the big gate to the zone, and rush their jeep in after it, drawing machine gun fire from the guards. Once inside they are safe--from the guards, at least--because no one would dare venture in.

In the zone, the photography switches to vivid color, although it too is a green wasteland, littered with hulks of abandoned cars, tanks and buildings. It's kind of amazing the low-burning tension this film is able to create while moving at such a slow pace, something those who found themselves getting into Solaris will be familiar with. This one is, comparatively, a total edge-of-your-seat thriller, however.

As they proceed the Stalker keeps warning them about the various terrible things that can happen to them if they wander off alone or try to hurry--yet nothing ever happens. He says that the place is constantly rearranging itself, and that "no one comes out the same way they came in." He ties ribbons to steels nuts and throws them ahead in their path, to make sure it's safe to go that way. Soon the writer starts to think the Stalker is just full of stuff--this is his basic view of humanity anyway--and wants to hurry off on his own. The Stalker becomes quite impassioned about how they must listen to him... apparently the personalities of the people one is traveling with affect one's visit, the obstacles one faces, and suchlike. They regroup, continue on, and this is the end of part one.

The Writer is getting nastier and nastier, and they're all starting to hate each other. The Professor has smuggled in instruments to measure the Zone, which the Stalker thinks is just so much silliness. These two do not seem to grasp the mystical nature of the Zone, which the Stalker laments. They lay down to sleep, and the Writer starts up his philosophical musings on how the world is crap and people are rotten, causing the Professor to tell him to shut up and "Keep your complexes to yourself." The Writer then says he just wants to say one more thing... and starts on another bitter monologue on another topic. Then we have an absolutely gorgeous slow track up a stream, looking at various little objects embedded in the stream, then a slow track back. The whole shot lasts three minutes.

SPOILERS > > >
They continue. At a certain point they have to go through a tunnel, which the Stalker says is very dangerous and refers to as "the meat grinder," but nothing at all dangerous happens. The Writer was asked to go first, however, a fact that he is very bitter about. The Professor has brought a gun, they now find out, and when a phone suddenly rings, he answers it and indicates that he's going to cause some trouble when they finally reach the room. The Stalker is all psychologically anguished that people could be so nasty, bitter and cynical. They finally reach the threshold of the room.

They are warned that the room will grant their innermost wish, which may not be the best thing. For example, a previous fellow who went in had a wish that in some way required the death of his brother to make possible, and the wishee ended up killing himself a week later for guilt. They ask the Writer to go in first, but had to go through the tunnel first and he's not gonna go. So they ask the Professor to go, and he reveals that he has a bomb. He's going to destroy the room, because it might one day fall into the wrong hands. They have a physical and verbal fight for the bomb, but the Stalker can't get it, causing him more anguish, since the promise of the Zone is "all the people of this Earth have left."

They talk. Eventually the Professor disassembles the bomb and throws it away. They all sit down together, and it starts raining inside, into a pool of water in the foreground. We see a fish near the detonator, and then a black pool of oil spreads over the water.

Now we are back in the bar, the men having returned. A black dog that they saw in the Zone has returned with the Stalker. He goes home and laments the soul-deadness of the two men, how you can't choose the personalities of who you travel with, and that people should be so without hope. His wife says that he should pity them, but he seems to take it very personally, that they cannot appreciate the gift he would have given them. We never find out if they made it into the room, but I came away feeling like they all just waited outside.

The Stalker's wife then makes a speech, to the camera, about how difficult it is to love a Stalker, what with him being emotionally distant and the time in jail and the mutant children and all--Girls, it ain't easy. Then we see their daughter wandering around, having to use crutches. She sits down at a table as we hear the sound of a train going by--like in the first scene of the film--and she stares at three glasses, sliding them across a table, apparently with her mind, until one falls off. The end.
< < < SPOILERS END

It was very poetic. I think one has to consider it more as a visual poem than anything, and the reasons I say that is that it unfolds with a number of beautiful images and evocative ideas, none of which come to any definite point or statement, but which define the ideas, and the act of experiencing and processing them, as the point. The images are held so long [the movie is 163 minutes and there are only 142 shots] that in a way you stop paying attention to what is "happening" and enter into a subconscious haze, where several interesting thoughts play through your mind: dreary lives in squalor without hope, bitterness and the inability to escape it, having to submit oneself to a higher power, not being able to choose your companions, your combined personalities creating your experience, and more. One spends the entire movie thinking something is just about to happen, but one doesn't really resent the movie when it doesn't, since the whole journey WAS the experience.

Apparently much of the exteriors were shot in Tallin, Estonia, where there is now a plaque up commemorating this movie's production. Tarkovsky shot all of the exteriors with one cinematographer, whom he had a rather troubled relationship with, then later discovered that all of his footage, a year's worth of work, was damaged and unusable. This apparently almost caused the director a nervous breakdown. He began again with another cinematographer, and interestingly, people who have seen both say that the footage was virtually identical. Ultimately it ended up taking three years to finish the film. Some see it as prophetic of Chernobyl, where you have another Russian Zone that is cordoned off and cannot be visited.

This film ends up being strikingly thematically similar to Solaris, in structure and topic. There is a prologue in a dreary real world where the characters are set up, then they venture into a place where the rules of nature are suspended, and they are forced to take a deep journey into their minds and emotions. One could see the planet is Solaris as granting wishes, like the room is said to do here. The personalities of the primary people involved, three men in both cases, create the circumstances they have to deal with. Both films end with them returning, in a sense, to the environment of the beginning, with vastly different perspectives, based on their experience. In retrospect, Solaris has a little more of a hook, but this one is perhaps richer and more rewarding, and also has much greater visual variety.

Anyway, certainly a specialized taste, and a film that will bore the eyelids off people who aren't prepared for how very slow Tarkovsky can be, but one that that is thoughtful and beautiful and very much worth watching.

It's undeniably very good, but also extremely esoteric and most people will probably not want to sit through it.

DVD Review: Pilgrim's Progress for Russians
Summary: 5 Stars

It seemed to me... I don't know, this is probably too simplistic, but it seemed to me that the Zone is the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, which is to say, the Church. The Stalkers are priests. Everything both in the Zone and outside the Zone is ruined, signifying the state of the earth after the Fall in the Garden. Outside the Zone (the world) is colorless and grimy. Inside the Zone, things are better (colorful) but still not perfect- perfection is found in the Room, which I think is Heaven. The scary, unseen things that terrorize them are demons. The dog's an angel. The stalkers (priests) are outlaws because priests were outlaws in the USSR. The little girl is in color because the Kingdom of Heaven (the Zone) is like a little child. The "alien" presence that came to earth, then left, was Christ Himself. The strange physics of the Zone represent miracles. Even the gerry can of gasoline which powered their entrance into the Zone- what else could it be but the Holy Spirit, who is represented as oil (fuel) in the Gospels? The journey to the Room is a long, arduous struggle, which is the Russian view of the path to salvation, a path that you can leave if you choose.

To me, this movie seemed like a Russian Orthodox Pilgrim's Progress, cloaked as sci fi to get past the Soviet censers.

DVD Review: Stalker: Artistic Masterpiece, but only for those who are able to take on the film as more than a film.
Summary: 5 Stars

The problems with Stalker is that you have to be a certain kind of person to understand it. Stalker, unfortunately, is more of an artist's movie. The movie is about the three men making a huge metamorphosis, and you have to watch it and really pay attention to every little detail as you move through the movie. It's slow, but it's slow for a purpose. It's a masterpiece, but you won't understand why unless you look deeply into it. The movie has a plot, but not a plot in the sense that Western cinema has brought us to expect. It's like the difference between, say, a novel and a poem. Stalker would be the poem: it relies on symbolism and the subconscious to try and portray it's message, and Tarkovsky accomplishes this wonderfully, provided you're patient and can really pay attention to the full depth of the film. Even the music in this movie is symbolic, in fact, Tarkovsky hinted that his score was sort of a reflection of East-West relations during the cold war, emphasized by the combination of a flute, tar, and Artemyev's synthesizer to give the music a weird, unearthly feel. Don't go into this movie expecting a clear plot, there isn't one. You really have to pay attention and think about the movie, and this is one of the reasons I adore it. It's a quest of faith, a search inside oneself, effecting the viewer as much as it effects the characters. In a way, you almost have to fit the Stalker's description of the kind of man he wishes to take to see the Room in the center of the Zone: A man who has lost all, and is hopeless. The kind of person who needs a journey of such magnitude and emotional depth as Stalker provides. You can enjoy the film either way, but to truly be effected by it, you must be able to relate to the characters, and see the journey through their eyes. It's a difficult movie, without a doubt, and certainly isn't for everyone; but is is an artistic masterpiece and triumph of storytelling through deep symbolism and subtle imagery, as well as a long and thoughtful sojourn through the soul.

Description of Stalker

This science fiction milestone from director Andrei Tarkovsky (Solaris) takes you into the Zone, a mysterious, guarded realm containing a mystical Room in which occupants' secret dreams come true. Stalker, a man able to lead others to this holy grail, escorts a writer and a scientist through this foreboding territory and confronts several unexpected challenges along the way. Based on the novel "Roadside Picnic" by Russian sci-fi writers Arkady and Boris Strugatsky.
Challenging, provocative, and ultimately rewarding, Andrei Tarkovsky's Stalker is a mind-bending experience that defies explanation. Like Tarkovsky's earlier and similarly enigmatic science fiction classic Solaris, this long, slow, meditative masterpiece demands patience and total attention; anyone accustomed to faster pacing is likely to abandon the nearly three-hour film before its first hour is over. On the other hand, those who approach Tarkovsky's work in a properly receptive (and wide awake) frame of mind are likely to appreciate the film's seductive depth of theme and hypnotic imagery. Set in what appears to be a post-apocalyptic future (although the time-frame is never specified), the eerie and unsettling story focuses on the title character, Stalker (Aleksandr Kajdanovsky), who leads characters known only as the Writer (Anatoli Solonitsyn) and the Scientist (or Professor, played by Nikolai Grinko) into a mysterious region called The Zone. Tarkovsky films their journey as a long odyssey, or religious pilgrimage, and center of The Zone--said to be under an alien influence--is where each of these men hopes to find a kind of personal transcendence. Despite obvious parallels to The Wizard of Oz, Tarkovsky's film is devoid of special effects or any fantastical elements typically associated with science fiction or fantasy. Instead, Stalker makes astonishing use of sound and bleak-but-beautiful imagery to envelope the viewer into the eerie atmosphere of The Zone and the dank, colorless landscape that surrounds it. And while the film's glacial pacing may be off-putting to some viewers, there's no denying that Stalker has a mesmerizing power of its own, including a thought-provoking and highly debatable ending that propels the film to a higher level of meaning and significance. --Jeff Shannon

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