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Baltic Cinema: Mirror

Thu 26 Feb | 18:30-20:30

Mirror screens in response to Saodat Ismailova’s exhibition As We Fade (Level 3 Gallery, until 7 June)

£6 Full price / £4 Students, under 18s, unwaged and 65+

Baltic Cinema: Mirror

Thu 26 february | 18:30 

£6 Full price / £4 Students, under 18s, unwaged and 65+

Dir. Andrei Tarkovsky USSR 1975 105’ (U)

Russian with English subtitles | 35mm transferred to digital video | Watch the trailer

Composed of images seemingly wrought from the very essence of the world. Andrei Tarkovsky’s peerless poetic meditation on memory and the passing of time screens in response to Saodat Ismailova’s exhibition As We Fade.

Andrei Tarkovsky drew on memories of a rural childhood before WWII for this personal, impressionistic and unconventional film poem. For perhaps his most daring experimentation with film structure, the director intersperses scenes from three eras – a childhood in the countryside, the Great War, and post-war maturity – to create a prismatic reflection of his own life and those of his parents.

Abandoning linear narrative in favour of dramatising discontinuous shards of memory (particularly relating to his mother Maria, played by Margarita Terekhova), Tarkovsky pioneered a poetic and richly allusive form. Wartime newsreel footage, self-consciously painterly compositions, indelible imagery (a field whipped suddenly by wind, a gas lantern flickering out), and the director’s mesmeric camera movements combine to create a work of cumulative, rhythmic effect. The soundtrack features music by Bach, and Tarkovsky’s father Arseny Tarkovsky reading from his own poetry.

—BFI

“You’d think Mirror might be a heavy, intellectual film, but it is direct, even basic: remembering, childhood, loss, speculation… It talks to people not through words, but through images and emotions. Wonderfully shot and composed, it contains some of the most spectacular imagery ever captured on screen.” 

—Barbara Schweizerhof

 

Doors open 18:30; Film starts 18:45. Pop-up cinema bar open from 18.00 for drinks.

Please note we cannot offer refunds on this event.

Eight people sat in the cinema looking at the screen.

Baltic Cinema

Baltic Cinema is a new year-round cinema programme at Baltic, lighting up our Level 1 Cinema with the best new and archive films. Bringing otherwise rarely-screened work to the North East, Baltic Cinema also expands our exhibitions, offering a chance to explore further some of the themes they raise.

Baltic Cinema has five strands:

Currents presents new work from across the world

Sources expands on our exhibitions

Selected shows films selected by our artists and partners

Quayside Kino is a monthly screening for families and children

News From Home offers films on and from the North East, for the people who live here

All regular screenings take place in our Level 1 Cinema. 

Baltic Cinema is supported by Film Hub North with National Lottery funding on behalf of the BFI Film Audience Network.

young people in front of their created lightbox artwork at Baltic

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