Lithuanian film director, one of the
most outstanding representatives of cinematographers. His contacts with
cinema began in 1985 with the TV serial “Sixteen-years-olds” (dir.
Raimondas Banionis), where Bartas played one of the main roles. He is a
graduate of the Moscow Film School (VGIK). He made his directorial debut
with his diploma film, the short documentary “Tofolaria” and
mediocre-length film (which called spectators’ attention) “For the
Remembrance of Last Day” (1989), where the real personages are “acting
themselves” according to the principles of feature film. The author
further “purified” the specific cinema language in the full-length film
“Three Days” (1991), which was awarded the prize of oicumene committee
at Berlin Film Festival (for the problems, the importance of the theme,
the profundity) in 1992, and FIPRESCI Prize for the originality of the
style, the significance of the theme, the beauty of pictures. This is a
story (almost without plot) about three young Lithuanians visiting
Kaliningrad-Karaliautchus-Kionigsberg – a moribund, outraged town. The
traditional dramaturgy is ignored in later Bartas’ films, as well: “The
Corridor” (1994, it was shown at Berlin Film Festival), “Few of Us ”
(1995, shown in Cannes, in the program “Other Point”), “Home” (1997,
shown in the same program in Cannes). All of them are works of free
structure, minimalistic form, philosophical associations. The works of
Bartas are not well-known and analysed in Lithuania, but they have a
small, faithful round of admirers in the West. (Bio Courtesy: The Auteurs, Image courtesy: Wikipedia)
Lithuanian auteur Sharunas Bartas is the
kind of filmmaker one would immediately be tempted to label
“pretentious” and “self-indulgent” because there is absolutely no
concession whatsoever that he gives to the viewers in terms of the
narrative, artistic, political and personal ambitions of his films,
burying them deeply within their part-hyper real and part-surreal
constructs. All his films have hinged themselves onto a particular
moment in Lithuanian history – the nation’s independence from the USSR,
just prior to the latter’s complete collapse – and they all deal with
the loss of communication, the seeming impossibility of true love to
flourish and the sense of pointlessness that the political separation
has imparted to its people. The characters in Bartas’ films are ones
that attempt in vain to put the dreadful past behind them, traverse
through the difficult present and get onto a future that may or may not
exist. With communication having been deemed useless, they hardly speak
anything and, even if they do, the talk is restricted to banal everyday
expressions. Consequently, Bartas’ films have little or no dialog and
rely almost entirely on Bressonian sound design consisting mostly of
natural sounds. Also Bresson-like is the acting in the films. There are
no expressions conveyed by the actors, no giveaway gestures and no easy
outlet for emotions.
The outdoor spaces are deep and vast in
Bartas’ films while the indoors are dark, decrepit and decaying. The
landscapes, desolate, usually glacial, nearly boundless and seemingly
inhospitable, are almost always used as metaphors for a larger scheme.
His compositions are often diagonal, dimly lit and simultaneously embody
static and dynamic components within a single frame. Interestingly, his
editing is large Eisensteinian and he keeps juxtaposing people, their
faces and landscapes throughout his filmography. But since the
individual images themselves possess much ambiguity of meaning, the
sequences retains their own, thereby overcoming the limitations of
associative montage. Another eccentric facet in Bartas’ work is the
amazing amount of critters found in his films. There are puppies,
kitten, frogs, seagulls and flies seen around and over his characters
regularly. May be, not considering the specific connotations that these
creatures bring to these scenes, the intention is Eisensteinian here too
– to indicate that the characters have been reduced to a level lower
than these beings, unable to either communicate with each other or be at
peace with nature, devoid of the notions of nationality and politics.
In many ways, the cinema of Bartas stands in between that of Andrei Tarkovsky
and Béla Tarr – both filmmakers concerned with chronicling life in a
communist state. While the childhood memories, existential crisis and
spiritual yearning in Bartas films directly has its roots in Tarkovsky’s
films (all the films starting from The Mirror (1975)), the
visual (dancing in entrapping circles, meaningless glances and chatter
over banquets and eventual self-destruction of the drifting characters)
and aural (the Mihály Vig-like loopy and creepy score consisting of
accordions, accentuated ambient noise) motifs, stark cinematography and
political exploration are reminiscent of Bartas’ Hungarian contemporary.
But, more importantly, it is the attitude towards his characters that
puts him right in midpoint between Tarr and Tarkovsky. Bartas’ work has
so far been characterized by two impulses – a warm nostalgia and
sympathy for his characters that betrays the director’s hope and love
for them, as in Tarkovsky’s cinema, and an overpowering cynicism,
clearly derived from the (post-neo-realist) films of Tarr, that keeps
remarking how the characters are all doomed and done for. This
(unbalanced) dialectic is evident in Bartas aesthetic itself, which
employs copious amounts of extremely long shots and suffocating
close-ups. In the former, characters are seen walking from near the
camera and into the screen, gradually becoming point objects eaten up by
the landscape while, in the latter, Bartas films every line and texture
of their faces with utmost intensity in a way that obviously shows that
he cares for them and the pain that they might be experiencing. This
conversation between optimism and pessimism towards his people also
places him alongside the Armenian filmmaker Artavazd Peleshian – another historian of traumatized lives in a Soviet state before and after independence.
Praejusios Dienos Atminimui (In Memory Of The Day Passed By, 1990)
One of the finest films by Sharunas Bartas, In Memory of the Day Passed By
(1990) is a somber, evocative mood piece set in post-independence
Lithuania and opens with the image of large flakes of snow moving slowly
along a river. This is followed by a shot of a woman and her kid
walking on a vast, snowy plain and moving away from the viewer until
they become nonentities assimilated by their landscape. This pair of
shots provides a very good synopsis of what Bartas’ cinema is all about.
The rest of the film presents us vignettes from the daily life of the
people living in the unnamed city, possibly Vilnius, and from the
garbage dump outside it. One of them presents a tramp-like puppeteer
wandering the streets of the city without any apparent destination. Like
the puppet that he holds, the people around him seem as if their
purpose of living has been nullified, now that the national strings that
had held and manipulated them so far have been severed. Consequently,
there are many shots that deal with religion and the intense Faith that
these people seem to be having, perhaps suggesting a yearning for the
replacement of a superior power that guides them. Bartas suffuses the
film with diagonal compositions indicative of a fallen world – a world
that can go nowhere but the abyss. Appropriately, the film closes with a
variation of its opening image: flakes of snow flowing downriver – an
apt metaphor for the many nations that would drift without a base after
the disintegration of the Soviet Union.
Trys Dienos (Three Days, 1991)
Three Days
(1991), Bartas’ maiden feature length work, unfolds in a harbor town in
Lithuania where two men and a women search for a shelter in the largely
uncaring place, possibly to make love. The first Bartas film to feature
his would-be collaborator (and muse) Yekaterina Golubeva, Three Days
plays out as a post-apocalyptic tale set in an industrial wasteland,
complete with decrepit structures and murky waters, where both positive
communication (Even the meager amount of dialogue in the film turns out
to be purely functional) and meaningful relationships (Almost everyone
in the film seems to be a vagrant) have been rendered irrelevant. Every
person in this desolate land seems to be an individual island, stuck at a
particular time in history forever. The visual palette (akin to the
bleached out scheme of the director’s previous work) is dominated by
earthy colours, especially brown, and the production design is highly
redolent of Tarkovsky’s Stalker (1979).
The actors are all Bressonian here and do no more than move about in
seemingly random directions and perform mundane, everyday actions. Like
in Bresson’s films, there is no psychological inquiry into the
characters’ behaviour and yet there is much pathos and poignancy that is
developed thanks to the austerity of Bartas’ direction and the
intensity of Vladas Naudzius’ cinematography. The film is titled Three Days,
but it could well have been titled ‘three months’, ‘three years’ or
even ‘eternity’ for, in the film, all time is one, the notion of future
nonextant and hope for escape futile.
Koridorius (The Corridor, 1994)
If Three Days presented people stuck in time and moving aimlessly through desolate landscapes, The Corridor (1994) gives us ones stuck geographically and drifting through abstract time. Bartas’ most opaque and affecting film to date, The Corridor is
a moody, meditative essay set at a time just after the independence of
Lithuania from the USSR and in a claustrophobic apartment somewhere in
Vilnius in which the titular corridor forms the zone through which the
residents of the building must pass in order to meet each other.
Extremely well shot in harsh monochrome, the interiors of the apartment
resemble some sort of a void, a limbo for lost souls if you will, from
which there seems to be no way out. Consisting mostly of evocatively
lit, melancholy faces that seem like waiting for a miracle to take them
out of this suffocating space, The Corridor also presents
sequences shot in cinema vérité fashion where we see the residents
drinking and dancing in the common kitchen. Of course, there is also the
typical central character, played by Sharunas Bartas himself, who seems
to be unable to partake in the merriment. Conventional chronology is
ruptured and reality and memory merge as Bartas cuts back and forth
between the adolescent chronicles of the protagonist, marked by
rebellion and sexual awakening, and his present entrapped self, unable
to comprehend what this new found ‘freedom’ means. Essentially an elegy
about the loss of a sense of ‘being’ and ‘purpose’, The Corridor remains an important film that earns a spot alongside seminal and thematically kindred works such as Paradjanov’s The Color of Pomegranates (1968) and Tarkovsky’s The Mirror (1975).
Few Of Us (1996)
Few of Us
(1996) is perhaps the least political of the already highly
noncommittal works of Sharunas Bartas. Not that this film does not base
itself strongly on the political situation in Lithuania, but that the
now-intimate backdrop of independent Lithuania is transposed onto a
remote foothill in Siberia where a tribe called the Tolofars maintains a
spartan life style. It is into this rugged, almost otherworldly land
that the beautiful protagonist of the film (Yekaterina Golubeva) is
air-dropped like an angel being relegated to the netherworld. She seems
as isolated from the people of this land as the Tolofars are from the
rest of the world. However, as indicated by the incessant cross cutting
between the worn out terrain of the village and the contours on
Golubeva’s face, this mysterious, hostile and unforgiving landscape is
as much a protagonist of Bartas’ film as Golubeva is. With an eye for
small and intricate changes in seasons, terrains and time of the day
comparable to that of James Benning, Bartas pushes his own envelope as
he lingers on eyes, faces and landscapes for seemingly interminable
stretches of time. Each image of the film carries with itself an air of a
still paining, vaguely familiar. All this sure does bring to surface
the experimental and, I daresay, self-conscious nature of Bartas’ work,
but what it also does is familiarize us with the hitherto alien and draw
connection between this abstract representation of protagonist’s
cultural disconnection in Tolofaria and the typical Bartas territory of
desolate, directionless lives lead by the people of post-Soviet
Lithuania.
A Casa (The House, 1997)
The House
(1997) opens to the image of a mansion as the narrator reads a
confessional letter written to his mother about their inability to
communicate with each other. The house and mother are, of course,
metaphors for the motherland that would be explored in the two hours
that follow. It seems to me that The House is the film that
Bartas finally comes to terms with the trauma dealt by the country’s
recent past that he has consistently expressed in his work.
Consequently, the film also seems like a summation of the director’s
previous films (One could say that the characters from Bartas’ previous
films reprise their roles here) and a melting pot of all the Tarkovsky
influences that have characterized his work (especially the last four
fictional works of the Russian). Shot almost entirely indoors, The House follows a young man carrying a pile of books as me moves from one room of the Marienbad-like
mansion to the other, meeting various men and women, none of whom speak
to each other and who might be real people of flesh and blood, shards
of memory or figments of fantasy. The house itself might be an abstract
space, as in The Corridor, representing the protagonist’s mind
with its spatial configuration disoriented like the chessboard in the
film. Furthermore, one also gets the feeling that Bartas is attempting
to resolve the question of theory versus practice – cold cynicism versus
warm optimism – with regards to his politics as we witness the
protagonist finally burn the books, page by page, he had so far held
tightly to his chest.
Freedom (2000)
Sharunas Bartas’ chef-d’oeuvre and his most accessible work to date, Freedom (2000) is also one of the most pertinent films of the past decade. Taking off from the wandering trio setup of Three Days, Freedom
begins with a chase scene right out of genre cinema transposed onto
Bartas’ highly de-dramatized canvas. The two men and women seem to be
illegal immigrants who are on the coast guard’s wanted list. If The House was national politics distilled into a claustrophobic setting, Freedom is the same being set in seemingly limitless open spaces. The most rigorous of all Bartas films, Freedom
is the kind of film Tarkovsky might have made had he lived to see the
new century. Like the Russian’s characters, the people in this film are
all marginal characters (and are often aptly pushed from the centre of
the frame towards its margins) who want to escape the oppressive, unfair
politics of this world and become one with nature and the unassailable
peace it seems to possess. Alas, like in Blissfully Yours
(2002), they are unable to depoliticize their world and start anew. The
tyrannical past is catching up with them, the present is at a stalemate
and is rotting and there is no sight of the future anywhere. Bartas
expands the scope of his usual investigation and deals with a plethora
of themes including the artificiality and fickleness of national
boundaries, the barriers that lingual and geographical differences
create between people and the ultimate impermanence of these barriers
and the people affected by it in this visually breathtaking masterwork.
Septyni Nematomi Zmones (Seven Invisible Men, 2005)
The most unusual of all Bartas films, the pre-apocalyptic Seven Invisible Men
(2005) starts off like a genre movie – a bunch of robbers trying to
evade the police after stealing and selling off a car. It is only after
about half an hour, when one of them arrives at a farm that is near
completely severed from the rest of the world, that the film moves into
the world of Bartas. Seven Invisible Men is the most talkative,
most rapidly edited and the most politically concrete of all the films
by the director and that may precisely be the idea – to serve as a
counterpoint to all the previous movies. All though there is too much
talk in the film, rarely do they amount to meaningful conversations,
bringing the characters back to the hopelessness of the director’s
earlier works. Like Freedom, all the characters here are
people living on the fringes of the society – con men and ethnic and
religious minorities – who seem to have sequestered themselves with this
settlement of theirs. All these characters seem to be trying to escape
their agonizing past and the politics of the world that seems to give
them no leeway in order to start afresh (The heist may have been the
last attempt at escape), in vain. In the final few minutes that recall
Tarkovsky’s The Sacrifice
(1986), we see the house, in which the characters have been living in,
burn down to dust. But, unlike Tarkovsky, it is Bartas’ cynicism that
overwhelms and he sees his characters as ultimately self-destructive
beings that have lost all control of their lives and hope for a better
future.
Indigène d’Eurasie (Eastern Drift, 2010)
The
trajectory of Bartas’ filmography, in a sense, runs anti-parallel to
that of Béla Tarr, with whom the former shares a number of artistic,
political and philosophical inclinations, and has moved from extreme
stylization to rough-hewn naturalism, from near-total narrative
abstraction to flirtation with generic structures, from
semi-autobiographical meditations set against the backdrop of Soviet
collapse to highly materialist tales of marginal lives in the Eurozone.
(In fact, one could say that the exact tipping point occurs at Freedom.) Eastern Drift finds
the filmmaker moving one step closer to conventional aesthetic as well
as dramatic construction and follows Gena (Bartas himself), who is on
the run after he knocks off his Russian boss after an altercation over a
hefty sum of money. Even though the film has the appearance of a
Euro-thriller, with the protagonist hopping from one major city of the
continent to another, each of which regularly gets its token
establishment shot (and all of which look very similar for the untrained
eye), it actually moves against the grain the sub-genre. Unlike the
traditional European action picture, in Eastern Drift movement –
the prime action over which the narrative is founded – itself is
problematized. A large part of the proceedings is made up of Gena trying
to sneak in and out of buildings as well as countries and finding
himself thwarted at almost every move. An antithesis to the utopianism
of Eurozone and its myth of intra-continental mobility, Eastern Drift
crystallizes and futhers Bartas’ preoccupation with suffocating
national borders, although the scenario over which he builds his
argument remains moot.
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