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Solaris By Robert Horton
The Russian answer to 2001, and very nearly as memorable a
movie. The legendary Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky made this extremely
deliberate science-fiction epic, an adaptation of a novel by Stanislaw
Lem. The story follows a cosmonaut (Donatas Banionis) on an eerie trip to
a planet where haunting memories can take physical form. Its bare outline
makes it sound like a routine space-flight picture, an elongated Twilight
Zone episode; but the further into its mysteries we travel, the less
familiar anything seems. Even though Tarkovsky's meanings and methods are
sometimes mystifying, Solaris has a way of crawling inside your
head, especially given the slow pace and general lack of forward momentum.
By the time the final images cross the screen, Tarkovsky has gone way
beyond SF conventions into a moving, unsettling vision of memory and home.
Well worthy of cult status, Solaris is both challenging art-house
fare and a whacked-out head trip.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Andrei Tarkovsky
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|  | Stars: Natalya Bondarchuk, Donatas Banionis, Jüri Järvet
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|  | Released: August 16, 1972
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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