StanleyK
04-01-2011, 07:52 PM
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/WhaleEye.png
Mankind is always seeking for answers. They have, in fact, a tendency to create queries for which there are no answers to keep themselves questioning. Is there a God? What's the meaning of life? In Werckmeister Harmonies, the mystery posited before us is a whale. The eye of a slain great white whale, a swirling vortex of light in the middle of darkness which looks as if it contains all the answers to all the questions of the universe. It's obviously a metaphor. What does it mean? What's the answer?
To get to that, it helps to look at how the film portrays the askers. Humanity in Werckmeister Harmonies is a strange beast, as capable of committing atrocities as they are of feeling guilt for them. This is the essence of the hospital trashing scene, a sustained display of brutality punctuated by a moment so (figuratively and literally) naked, almost beautiful in its patheticness, that a single frail old man can stop an entire crowd and send them away, heads hanging in shame.
The heart of the film is in moments like that, in finding something beautiful in the mundane. In how Valuska can take a bunch of drunks and, with them, describe a solar eclipse as a trascendent moment. In the way he helps his uncle György into bed. In how he cleans up his house and silently prepares a meal for himself. In his giddy excitement in describing the magnificence of the whale to everyone he meets. In his comically inept attempt to tuck in two rowdy kids. In a couple of lovers, neither particularly attractive but both perfectly happy with each other. In a man and his wife who look out at their departing nephew, separately but in the exact same way.
The film's most famous feature is likely that it's composed of 37 shots with an ASL of 3'39''. Far from a mere gimmick, the long takes allow the fluid cinematography to constantly shift points of view and subtly alter our perception; the scarcity of cuts make each one carry a great deal of impact. I'd like to someday dissect each shot, but for now I'll concentrate on its ending, a rapturous epilogue scored by Mihály Vig's haunting track 'Old.' (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMlQ04g0pDc)
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC01.png
The penultimate shot finds Valuska singing to himself, presumably post-lobotomization, blissfully unaware of his surroundings.
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC02.png
The last cut of the film links Valuska to the whale, both thematically (like Valuska, the whale has been attacked and stripped, rendered powerless and laid bare before the world) and spatially, as both, roughly occupying the same spot of the frame, are regarded coldly at a distance from the camera. The last scene begins as a crane shot with a God's eye point-of-view...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC03.png
But slowly, the camera descends...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC04.png
And when it reaches the ground, we join György, in a behind-the-shoulder tracking shot reminiscent of the earlier ones following Valuska. We are now looking through his eyes...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC05.png
As he approaches the whale, it grows in size. The closer you are to the mystery, the bigger it appears to be...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC06.png
The trek from tail to eye takes a really long time. Like the previous shot of the truck taking over a minute to pass by Valuska, it helps us get a sense of scale, of just how gigantic the whale is...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC07.png
When György finally reaches the eye, the camera tilts upwards to look at it from below. Almost the entire frame is occupied by the dark hide of the whale, with the only other elements being its eye, and György staring at it in awe. He examines it for a long time, like Valuska, looking for an answer...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC08.png
Eventually, he starts walking away, and the camera rejoins him at his level, this time facing him dead on. He walks a few meters...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC09.png
And then stops, staring past us...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC10.png
He turns to take one last look at the whale...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC11.png
And leaves the frame. We can see the whale as György just did. We first saw the truck carrying it, which only glimpsed at its enormity; then we entered the truck with Valuska, and we could see parts of its whole, some detached from it and displayed in glass jars; later, only the eye, its most striking part, shrouded in darkness. And now that we are finally seeing the whole whale from the front, the daylight clouds it, makes it hard to see. It seems that it's impossible to see the mystery clearly in its entirety, as if God is denying it to us...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC12.png
Just seconds before the cut to black, a sunbeam emerges from a building behind and fills the entire top half of the frame...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC13.png
'Directed by Béla Tarr.'
Tarr is the God of this universe, and he is denying us the answer; there isn't one. Trying to figure it out has driven men insane. Thus the heresy of Andreas Werckmeister, who tried to apply formulas to decipher the indecipherable, quantify the unquantifiable. The mystery of life is exactly that, a mystery. It's pointless to try to know what the whale is a metaphor of. The metaphor itself is the meaning. I'm not saying Werckmeister Harmonies can't be understood, but it has primarily to be taken in, felt. In that sense, it's like the 2001: A Space Odyssey of this century; indeed, both films are about as close to a religious epiphany as I've ever come.
Mankind is always seeking for answers. They have, in fact, a tendency to create queries for which there are no answers to keep themselves questioning. Is there a God? What's the meaning of life? In Werckmeister Harmonies, the mystery posited before us is a whale. The eye of a slain great white whale, a swirling vortex of light in the middle of darkness which looks as if it contains all the answers to all the questions of the universe. It's obviously a metaphor. What does it mean? What's the answer?
To get to that, it helps to look at how the film portrays the askers. Humanity in Werckmeister Harmonies is a strange beast, as capable of committing atrocities as they are of feeling guilt for them. This is the essence of the hospital trashing scene, a sustained display of brutality punctuated by a moment so (figuratively and literally) naked, almost beautiful in its patheticness, that a single frail old man can stop an entire crowd and send them away, heads hanging in shame.
The heart of the film is in moments like that, in finding something beautiful in the mundane. In how Valuska can take a bunch of drunks and, with them, describe a solar eclipse as a trascendent moment. In the way he helps his uncle György into bed. In how he cleans up his house and silently prepares a meal for himself. In his giddy excitement in describing the magnificence of the whale to everyone he meets. In his comically inept attempt to tuck in two rowdy kids. In a couple of lovers, neither particularly attractive but both perfectly happy with each other. In a man and his wife who look out at their departing nephew, separately but in the exact same way.
The film's most famous feature is likely that it's composed of 37 shots with an ASL of 3'39''. Far from a mere gimmick, the long takes allow the fluid cinematography to constantly shift points of view and subtly alter our perception; the scarcity of cuts make each one carry a great deal of impact. I'd like to someday dissect each shot, but for now I'll concentrate on its ending, a rapturous epilogue scored by Mihály Vig's haunting track 'Old.' (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMlQ04g0pDc)
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC01.png
The penultimate shot finds Valuska singing to himself, presumably post-lobotomization, blissfully unaware of his surroundings.
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC02.png
The last cut of the film links Valuska to the whale, both thematically (like Valuska, the whale has been attacked and stripped, rendered powerless and laid bare before the world) and spatially, as both, roughly occupying the same spot of the frame, are regarded coldly at a distance from the camera. The last scene begins as a crane shot with a God's eye point-of-view...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC03.png
But slowly, the camera descends...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC04.png
And when it reaches the ground, we join György, in a behind-the-shoulder tracking shot reminiscent of the earlier ones following Valuska. We are now looking through his eyes...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC05.png
As he approaches the whale, it grows in size. The closer you are to the mystery, the bigger it appears to be...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC06.png
The trek from tail to eye takes a really long time. Like the previous shot of the truck taking over a minute to pass by Valuska, it helps us get a sense of scale, of just how gigantic the whale is...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC07.png
When György finally reaches the eye, the camera tilts upwards to look at it from below. Almost the entire frame is occupied by the dark hide of the whale, with the only other elements being its eye, and György staring at it in awe. He examines it for a long time, like Valuska, looking for an answer...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC08.png
Eventually, he starts walking away, and the camera rejoins him at his level, this time facing him dead on. He walks a few meters...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC09.png
And then stops, staring past us...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC10.png
He turns to take one last look at the whale...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC11.png
And leaves the frame. We can see the whale as György just did. We first saw the truck carrying it, which only glimpsed at its enormity; then we entered the truck with Valuska, and we could see parts of its whole, some detached from it and displayed in glass jars; later, only the eye, its most striking part, shrouded in darkness. And now that we are finally seeing the whole whale from the front, the daylight clouds it, makes it hard to see. It seems that it's impossible to see the mystery clearly in its entirety, as if God is denying it to us...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC12.png
Just seconds before the cut to black, a sunbeam emerges from a building behind and fills the entire top half of the frame...
http://i943.photobucket.com/albums/ad271/PTA-Dre/PIC13.png
'Directed by Béla Tarr.'
Tarr is the God of this universe, and he is denying us the answer; there isn't one. Trying to figure it out has driven men insane. Thus the heresy of Andreas Werckmeister, who tried to apply formulas to decipher the indecipherable, quantify the unquantifiable. The mystery of life is exactly that, a mystery. It's pointless to try to know what the whale is a metaphor of. The metaphor itself is the meaning. I'm not saying Werckmeister Harmonies can't be understood, but it has primarily to be taken in, felt. In that sense, it's like the 2001: A Space Odyssey of this century; indeed, both films are about as close to a religious epiphany as I've ever come.