Review by Eric Faden

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Pavel Tavares’ video essay Tarkovsky’s Napes begins with a study of Tarkovsky’s signature shot before moving into a more personal examination of crisis.  Like many video essays, this film shifts modes of address as it transitions from subject to subject. 

Tavares’ study initially dwells on Tarkovsky’s recurring images of napes – of the back of the head.  The essay careful traces the variety of ways Tarkovsky integrates these shots across many of his films.  In some cases, Tarkovsky brings the nape into the shot via actor movement.  At other times, the camera moves around the actor to frame the nape.  The abundance of evidence helps make the case of Tarkovsky’s fetishization of this shot and Tavares often provides graphic matches of framings from different scenes and films to show the consistency of Tarkovsky’s framing of actors.

The filmmaker then speculates on the use and effects of these shots with interesting insights.  Counter to conventional Hollywood cinema and its reliance on the close-up to convey psychological clarity (see Kevin B. Lee’s The Spielberg Face – the ideal companion to this film), the framing of the nape creates a kind of unusual variation of off-screen space.  While the actor remains within the frame, their face is withheld, leaving the audience to ponder or, as Tavares speculates, project our emotions onto this obscured surface. 

The film then drifts into an investigation of crises and links this investigation into issues from Latin American cinema.  The film’s second half strays from the particulars of Tarkovsky to his more theoretical and political ideas.  Indeed, the film becomes more self-reflexive and poetic, examining issues of personal, political, and perhaps even spiritual crises.  These interesting ideas remain more elusive and fleeting, relying on an audience already familiar with Tarkovsky’s and Glauber Rocha’s films and writings. 

Throughout the video essay Tavares integrates original footage.  This formal move in the video essay genre is one worth considering.  What does it mean to imitate a shot from a Tarkovsky film?  In my experience, there is a profound intellectual leap that occurs when creating cinema.  For instance, knowledge acquired from watching and reading about films provides one level of understanding.  However, filmmaking provides an even more intimate knowledge of moving images.  One becomes profoundly aware of the infinity of visual choices available and the struggle to decide which singular option best communicates meaning to your audience.  This struggle provides a level of insight nearly impossible to gain otherwise.

Indeed, Tavares’ own use of the nape shot appears to compel the creation of this essay as we glimpse (perhaps too briefly) a series of shots from his previous films.  The film’s first half then enunciates the struggle of understanding meaning as Tavares proposes and tests different ways in which Tarkovsky’s napes can be understood.  This essay raises more questions than it answers but that is its point as answers cannot be found if we don’t first frame the questions. 

While the documentary aspires toward the explanatory, the video essay dwells on those cinematic ambiguities that remain imperceptible, unconsidered.  And the questions Tavares raises, give us a way of re­-viewing Tarkovsky in an important, new way.