Bela Tarr, Interview
Bela Tarr, Interview
Bela Tarr, Interview
In a phone conversation from Hungary, Tarr--with his typical deadpan delivery-explained why he chose "The Turin Horse" as his final project, reflected on the
evolution of his distinctive career and hinted at what might come next.
While your work stretches across over 30 years, you've only
made a handful of features, and you remain a critical
darling. Why stop making movies when you're still at the top
of your game?
You're right. A filmmaker is a nice bourgeois job. But I really don't want to do it. I'm
not a real filmmaker. I've always been in it for the people and just wanted to say
something about their lives. During these 34 years of filmmaking, I've said everything
I want to say. I can repeat it, I can do a hundred things, but I really don't want to bore
you. I really don't want to copy my films. That's all.
Do you remember when you first decided you wanted to
stop?
I think it was 2008, when I was doing an interview with Cahiers du Cinema, and I had
a feeling that I could only do one more film, "The Turin Horse," and then the shop is
closed.
So while you were shooting "The Turin Horse," you were
thinking of it as a final film?
Yes. Everybody knew. The whole crew knew this would be last. Of course, they
wanted to convince me to do more and more, but I can't. This is my personal decision.
I can't say more than I've already said about it.
When people talk about your style of filmmaking, they're
usually referring to a period that started with "Damnation":
Your use of black-and-white, slow-burn narratives, long
takes and so on. But your TV version of "Macbeth," shot in
two takes, and the expressionistically colorful "Almanac of
Digital cameras allow for longer takes. Did you ever consider
shooting digital?
No, I prefer 35mm. Celluloid, for me, is the thing.
Do you think there are good reasons for other filmmakers to
shoot their projects digitally?
Yes, of course, but they should not pretend this is a movie. They can say this is a new
technology. And the new technology has to have a new language. That's what I prefer,
when you make a new language. Do not say this is a film. Video has to find a new
language because it's a new technology.
How do you feel about people watching your films on
different platforms other than a large screen?
I hate it. For example, I heard somebody watched "Satantango" on a mobile phone.
That hurts me. It was planned and shot for the big screen.
Your films are quiet, almost meditative experiences. Does it
feel that way on the set?
No! None of it is meditational. You have to hold everything in your hands.
Filmmaking is horrible work and you're always fighting with the weather, the time,
the money situation. When you're on the set, you have no time for any intellectual
effort. You have to just go ahead. When you know what you want, you never stop
before you get what you want.
Do you bring these sort of lessons to the classroom?
I'm building up a film school in Croatia as we speak. When I'm teaching, my students,
young people, are shooting their own movies. I just try to help them develop
something inside themselves that they may not have enough courage to realize, or
they don't know how to explain themselves. I just push them, push them, push them to
find their own language. I never teach them my film language because every
filmmaker has a different language, a different culture, a different background, a
different history, a different budget. You cannot compare these things. But I can push
them to be themselves and create something personal. I'll help them if they have
doubts.