We just watched a film about everything that says (verbally) nothing. Samsara. Just remarkable.
Samsara is a follow up (in a way, though it is not specifically connected) to Baraka - and this style is really very similar to the better known Koyaanisqatsi.
It is a film for our times. Whether it provides hope or hopelessness, it all depends upon which images resonate with you. But we found it beautiful, profound, challenging - with a gorgeous soundtrack by Michael Stearns, with Dead Can Dance's Lisa Gerrard, as well.
It really is a movie to see on the big screen - but it looked really good on our little LG flat screen too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsara_(2011_film)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0770802/
Drum
(9,136 posts)I think I pretty well missed it in NYC theaters, but I think I will hafta purchase it on the pest-possible disc that I can. I bought Baraka ages ago, and it never fails to be a treat whenever I show/lend it to someone. My kind of films (those you mentioned,) that let us insert our own responses to the ravishing images. The technical efforts Fricke &Co take are just extraordinary in their payoff. It's like the recorded media really being analogous to our eyes actually seeing something.
Thanks again for mentioning this fine work!
NRaleighLiberal
(60,013 posts)allowing you to think of connections and meanings well after the viewing. I woke up pondering the juxtaposition of beauty, heartache, irony, infinite space and impossible crowding, purity and filth - all somehow connected.
It makes me wonder exactly what we humans are up to on this earth (something I've wondered for a long time, to tell the truth).
MichaelSoE
(1,576 posts)I watched it yesterday and being a member of the photography group I am going to link this there.
One difference between this and Koyaaniqatsi was the sound track. Koyaaniqatsi left me exhausted. Philip Glass's score was perfect for that movie but I was relieved to have a bit more laid back sound track for Samsara.
kentauros
(29,414 posts)As soon as you mentioned "time lapse" in your Photography thread, I had a good idea it was him
He did another fine film and work of art called "Baraka". I'll have to get that one as well as Chronos, if Netflix has it.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,013 posts)we saw and loved Baraka first; Samsara covers some of the same ground philosophically, though of course visiting different regions. I guess I consider them two parts of a total piece, both indispensable. I own Baraka, and will eventually purchase Samsara. Chronos is just fine, but not quite at the same level.
kentauros
(29,414 posts)I saw the first two Qatsi movies in the theater, but never got to see Naqoyqatsi. I like all these types of movies
I remember when I got out of seeing Powaqqatsi that I wasn't as enthused by its message as I had been with Koyaanisqatsi. Yet, when I bought the DVD a few years ago, I found myself almost in tears in certain parts. What a difference a couple of decades will do to your perceptions of the world!