Literature in Cinema: Faust

Faust

MS16

Genre

Drama

Director

Aleksandr Sokurov

Run time

2h 14min

Cast

Johannes Zeiler, Anton Adasinsky, Hanna Schygulla, Isolda Dychauk, Georg Friedrich

Winner of the Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion, this idiosyncratic and playful reinvention of Goethe's play marks the return of Aleksandr Sokurov after a four-year absence. Accordingly, Sokurov's Faust immediately overthrows Goethe by adopting a broadly comic treatment grounded in scatological touches, slapstick, and a nonstop barrage of dialogue. Mephistopheles (referred to here as the Moneylender and played by Anton Adasinsky) is depicted as a clumsy and ridiculously grotesque figure, while Faust is largely stripped of dignity and gravitas and rendered absurd in Johannes Zeiler's comically mannered tour de force performance. Reversing and subverting the original in a number of other respects, Sokurov implicitly positions Faust's craving of knowledge and power (i.e., the Enlightenment) as the source of 20th-century evil, a precursor to the ruthless use of force in the hands/name of Hitler, Lenin, and Hirohito. Distinguished by its elaborate camera movement, intricate production design, and rich location work, this retelling of Faust is by far Sokurov's most visually delightful film in a long time: yes, Faust is a feast for the eyes.

The film screens in German with Estonian subtitles.

Genre

Drama

Director

Aleksandr Sokurov

Run time

2h 14min

Cast

Johannes Zeiler, Anton Adasinsky, Hanna Schygulla, Isolda Dychauk, Georg Friedrich

Winner of the Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion, this idiosyncratic and playful reinvention of Goethe's play marks the return of Aleksandr Sokurov after a four-year absence. Accordingly, Sokurov's Faust immediately overthrows Goethe by adopting a broadly comic treatment grounded in scatological touches, slapstick, and a nonstop barrage of dialogue. Mephistopheles (referred to here as the Moneylender and played by Anton Adasinsky) is depicted as a clumsy and ridiculously grotesque figure, while Faust is largely stripped of dignity and gravitas and rendered absurd in Johannes Zeiler's comically mannered tour de force performance. Reversing and subverting the original in a number of other respects, Sokurov implicitly positions Faust's craving of knowledge and power (i.e., the Enlightenment) as the source of 20th-century evil, a precursor to the ruthless use of force in the hands/name of Hitler, Lenin, and Hirohito. Distinguished by its elaborate camera movement, intricate production design, and rich location work, this retelling of Faust is by far Sokurov's most visually delightful film in a long time: yes, Faust is a feast for the eyes.

The film screens in German with Estonian subtitles.

Info

Rating

Under 16 Not Recommended

Production year

2011

Global distributor

Films Boutique

Local distributor

-

In cinema

2/18/2013