Adam Grinwald is a Feature Writer at Collider with a lifelong passion for cinema, literature, music, and culture. From the early days of memorizing practically every single line of dialogue off a ...
The world of Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr, whose 1994 masterpiece, “Satantango,” screens Saturday and Sunday at Facets Multimedia, is aptly summarized by the title of one of his best movies, ...
Béla Tarr, a giant of world cinema whose absorbing, challenging films helped define the minimalist arthouse style named slow cinema, died on Monday. He was 70. The European Film Academy confirmed Tarr ...
The black and white drama, considered one of the best films ever made, will screen at NYFF this weekend before an October theatrical release. It’s also one that’s rarely seen, thanks in part to that ...
"I'm just a big fucking maniac who believes in people," the filmmaker said before screening the 4K restoration of his seven-hour masterpiece. When I asked Béla Tarr if he ever suspected that his seven ...
Olga Artemyeva is a film critic, screenwriter and film curator based in NYC. She has a PhD in Art History and teaches Film Studies. Her dissertaion was dedicated to the evolution of horror, and it ...
The Hungarian director Béla Tarr’s 1994 film “Sátántangó,” which I discuss in the clip above, is based on the first novel by László Krasznahorkai, who co-wrote the screenplay with Tarr, and who is the ...
Satantango, first published in Hungary in 1985 and now regarded as a classic, is a monster of a novel: compact, cleverly constructed, often exhilarating, and possessed of a distinctive, compelling ...
In 1994, the director Béla Tarr released a film – seven hours long – called Sátántangó. Hailed as a cinematic masterpiece, the writer Susan Sontag said: “I’d be glad to see it every year for the rest ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Béla Tarr, a giant of world cinema whose absorbing, challenging films helped define the minimalist arthouse style named slow ...