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cover


Editor
Nathan Dunne

Contributors
Jean-Paul Sartre, Marc Forster, Vida Johnson & Graham Petrie, Natasha Synessios, James Quandt, Peter Green, Mark Le Fanu, Evgeny Tsymbal, Robert Bird, et al

February 2008
Hardback
464 pages
350 b/w and colour ills
25.0 x 20.0 cm
10.0 x 8.0 in
ISBN13: 978 1 906155 04 9
More Praise for Tarkovksy

Nathan Dunne's excellent Tarkovsky has been received a glowing review on Writers are Readers. Here is a quote from Noah Charney's review:

"Nathan Dunne’s Tarkovsky is the best and most important book written on the Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky... Dunne’s book, published by the elegant UK press Black Dog... is generously, lavishly illustrated. The essays are clear and intelligent. They will be ideal for true Tarkovsky devotees and film students, though it should be noted that they do not provide step-by-step exegeses of the films, and therefore are not suitable as annotations for those seeking a key to the symbolism. This is a film student’s film book about a film lover’s film maker. And future such books would do well to emulate this excellent example."
Writers are Readers

Read the full review here.



More Praise for Tarkovsky

Tarkovsky has been reviewed in the latest issue of Inscape. Here is a quote from the review:

"The key to open a door to rich and penetrating studies."
Inscape




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Tarkovsky

Buy Now: UK £29.95 | US $49.95

Tarkovsky provides a collection of accessible academic essays by leading film studies professionals. A challenging, broadly illustrated book that fully captures the essence of this cinematic pioneer.


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“Juxtaposing a person with an environment that is boundless, collating him with a countless number of people passing by close to him and far away, relating a person to the whole world, that is the meaning of cinema.” Andrei Tarkovsky

Tarkovsky pays tribute to the substantial legacy of Andrei Tarkovsky, the most important Soviet filmmaker of the post-war era, and one of the world’s most renowned cinematic geniuses. His reputation has grown significantly since his death twenty years ago in Paris. Tarkovsky created spiritual, existential films of incredible beauty, repeatedly returning to themes of memory, dreams, childhood and Christianity. Hugely influential on directors such as David Lynch, Steven Soderburgh and Lars Von Trier, he is particularly known for his re-imagining of the science fiction genre in films such as Solaris and Stalker.

Tarkovsky provides a collection of accessible academic essays by leading film studies professionals that explore aspects of Tarkovsky's films including their sociological and psychological dimensions, their cinematic language and their rich symbolism. Contributions include the first ever English translation of Jean-Paul Sartre’s famous essay on the film Ivan’s Childhood, along with pieces by Harvard professor Stephanie Sandler, film critic and curator James Quandt and Evgeny Tsymbal, assistant director to Tarkovsky on Stalker.

Tarkovsky is illustrated with original stills along with studio shots, lobby cards, posters and other rare ephemera and contains a wealth of previously unseen material from Soviet archives making it the definitive text on Tarkovsky’s singularly complex body of work.