MOVIE DISCUSSION:
Stephen McFerron, Cinematic Doctrine's newest contributor (read him here!), joins Melvin to discuss Stalker, the popular Andrei Tarkovsky science-fiction classic!
Topics:
- Introducing Stalker is equally simple (three men travel through a zone to find a room that grants one's greatest desire) and complex (constant philosophical debate, ruminations upon the terror of desire, and the intimidating presence of The Zone).
- Stephen, "I think it's about evangelism and the Christian walk - to some degree."
- Stalker is not only literally long, coming in at 162-minutes, it also can feel long with exceedingly drawn-out sequences, but Melvin feels these moments imitate the mundane periods in our life that help us think.
- The Zone that our characters traverse is not only depicted like a character itself, but a deity as well.
- The Zone demands respect if what it has to offer is to be obtained, something one may consider is similar to God Himself.
- Spiritualism and Christianity were largely prohibited in Russian film and art during 1979, and yet Tarkovsky cleverly depicts Christian symbolism, strife, and meditations throughout Stalker's runtime.
- One of Melvin's favorite aspects of Stalker is the two brief reprieves where characters sit down and talk directly to the audience, exposing their soul through poetic raison d'être.
- Melvin, "Stalker really wrestles with the concept, "You may think you know what you want, but what you want may not be what you wanted.""
- Evangelism is often a painfully slow, seemingly fruitless process. And yet it often helps orient the evangelist to God first and foremost, despite its subject being the Godless.
- Getting into the final monologue of the film delivered by the Stalker's wife, which kills Melvin.
- Sometimes with evangelistic pursuits we neglect to focus on one of our most rewarding responsibilities: the family.
- God permeates not just the spectacular but also the mundane. Is that not also joyful?
- Melvin believes there's a severe criticism of industrialization through a particular B-theme of Stalker.
- It seems there's a perpetual frustration between Russian artists and the Russian government. Stalker definitely includes some of that cultural tension.
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