SUBJECTS

Artists, Russian -- 15th century -- Drama, Icons -- Russia -- Drama, Rublev, Andrei, Saint, d. ca. 1430 -- Drama, Russia -- History -- 15th century -- Drama

Andrei Rublev

featuring

Anatoli Solonitsyn, Ivan Lapikov, Nikolai Grinko, Nikolai Sergeyev,

Best Arthouse Film of All Time—The Guardian

Based on the life of the fifteenth-century Russian icon painter, Andrei Rublev uses history to confront the present, investigating not only humanity’s seemingly endless capacity for cruelty, but the responsibility of an artist to either fight it or record it. “I do not understand historical films which have no relevance to the present,” Tarkovsky wrote. “For me the most important thing is to use historical material to express Man’s ideas and to create contemporary characters.” The monk and painter Andrei Rublev, wandering through medieval barbarism and brutality, plays out the dilemmas facing every artist, every human, caught in a world spinning violently out of control. A grandly designed spectacle, as otherwordly and austere as Rublev’s own canvases (J. Hoberman called it “a superproduction gone ideologically berserk”), Andrei Rublev is an intense exploration of the need for faith—whether in God, in humanity, in nation, or in art—to make sense of life.

—Jason Sanders

Based on the life of the fifteenth-century Russian icon painter, Andrei Rublev uses history to confront the present, investigating not only humanity’s seemingly endless capacity for cruelty, but the responsibility of an artist to either fight it or record it. “I do not understand historical films which have no relevance to the present,” Tarkovsky wrote. “For me the most important thing is to use historical material to express Man’s ideas and to create contemporary characters.” The monk and painter Andrei Rublev, wandering through medieval barbarism and brutality, plays out the dilemmas facing every artist, every human, caught in a world spinning violently out of control. A grandly designed spectacle, as otherworldly and austere as Rublev’s own canvases (J. Hoberman called it “a superproduction gone ideologically berserk”), Andrei Rublev is an intense exploration of the need for faith—whether in God, in humanity, in nation, or in art—to make sense of life.

Jason Sanders
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Andrei Tarkovsky
  • Andrei Konchalovsky
Cinematographer
  • Vadim Yusov
Language
  • Russian
Print Info
  • B&W/Color
  • 35mm
CINEFILES

CineFiles is an online database of BAMPFA's extensive collection of documentation covering world cinema, past and present.

View Andrei Rublev documents  

Andrei Rublev (review), Time Out New York, Steven Boone, 2002

Tarkovsky at 70 (program note), Film Society of Lincoln Center, 2002

The poetry of apocalypse: the films of Andrei Tarkovsky (program note), Cinematheque Ontario/a division of Toronto International Film Festival Group, James Quandt, 2002

Andrei Rublev (review), Reader (Chicago, Ill.), Jonathan Rosenbaum, 2000

Andrei Rublev (program note), Harvard Film Archive, 2000

Andrei Roublev (distributor materials), Kino International Corporation, 1992

Think icon (review), Village Voice, J. Hoberman, 1992

A tribute to Andrei Tarkovsky (program note), Hong Kong Film Festival, 1987

Homenaje in memoriam: Andrei Tarkovski (program), Cinemateca de Cuba, 1987

A tribute to Andrei Tarkovsky (program), Hong Kong Film Festival, Michael Lam, 1987

Displaying 10 of 21 publicly available documents.


View all Andrei Rublev documentation on CineFiles.