Faust | |
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Directed by | Jan Švankmajer |
Produced by | Jaromír Kallista |
Written by | Jan Švankmajer |
Starring | Petr Cepek Jan Kraus Vladimír Kudla Antonin Zacpal |
Release date(s) | September 10, 1994 |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | Czech Republic |
Language | Czech Latin |
Faust is a 1994 Czech film directed by Jan Švankmajer. It merges live-action footage with stop-motion footage and includes imaginative puppetry and claymation. The Faust character is played by Petr Čepek. The film was produced by Jaromír Kallista. Although the film does not serve to accurately portray the Faustus legend, it utilizes the legend in a rather imaginative way, borrowing and blending elements from the story as told by Goethe and Christopher Marlowe with traditional folk renditions. It has a distinctly Modernist, Absurdist, Kafkaesque feel, especially with the setting in Prague. The tone is dark but humorous. The voices in the English version were provided by Andrew Sachs.
The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival.[1]
The story commences on the streets of Prague on an ordinary grey morning with commuters bustling about. We are introduced to the figure of an Everyman, played by Petr Čepek, a colourless figure emerging from a metro station. On his way home, the man encounters two men handing out flyers, one of which he takes. It is a map of the city with a location marked in. He shrugs and discards it, returning to his dilapidated tenement building. As he is opening his mailbox, he sees a mother and child walking out of the building dragging a doll behind them. He goes up to his lodging and opens his door, releasing a black cockerel that runs down the stairs. Entering, he sits down to eat, cutting himself a slice of bread. He discovers an egg concealed inside the loaf and extracts it. He cracks it open but it is empty. As it breaks, the lights go out and the wind rises. Objects are thrown about the room. The commotion ceases and the man goes to the window and looks down to where the two men from earlier are staring up at him with whitened eyes. One of them holds the cockerel. He closes the blind and returns to the table, where he finds the map and, using his own map of the city, traces out the location marked.
The next day, he goes to the spot indicated and enters a large darkened building from which a man rushes in fear. The man presses on into the interior and descends to a dressing room, where he finds a charred script, a robe embroidered with sigils, greasepaint, a wig and beard and a cap. Sitting down he dresses himself as Faust and speaks to himself, (the first words spoken in the film) Faust's opening declaration of intent to follow black magic. A stage light begins to flash and a buzzer sounds indicating ‘actors onstage’. Faust rises and makes his way through the backstage area, past a dressing room full of shrieking chorus girls and a resting marionette to the stage. He peeps through the closed curtains and sees an audience assembling. Struck with stage fright, he pulls off his costume and wipes off his makeup. Looking around, he sees various stage-hands who regard him in a challenging way. He looks for a way to escape, opens his clasp knife and cuts an exit through the cardboard backdrop to find himself in the darkness of a Gothic vault. He walks on until his come to an alchemist's laboratory, with alembics, bottles, skulls, candles and a grimoire. He opens the stove and blows the embers under a large retort. They flare up and he leaps back. The liquid in the retort starts to bubble. Insects, birds skeletons scuttle over the table as the liquid thrashes about, eventually resolving itself into a foetus, then a child. The man smashes the retort and carries the homunculus to the grimoire. Writing magic sigils on a piece of paper, he folds it and, using his knife, inserts it into the golem's mouth. The clay child awakes and sits up, looking around. The child's face morphs three times first into a boy's, then into the face of the man (the protagonist himself), then into a mocking, laughing skull. The man becomes angry (for being reminded of his eventual death) and crushes the clay figure, who only 'dies' after he retrieves and tears up the magic paper.
A stage backdrop falls from above. Then descends a huge wooden marionette of a good Angel who proceeds to warn Faustus from practicing black magic. The angel departs. There is a clap of theatrical thunder and the head of a Demon is seen rolling down a mountainside to take the stage. The demon exhorts Faustus to practice black magic. The fiend departs. A servant enters and tells Faustus that two men are waiting outside for him. Faustus rises and leaves. A Fool enters and begins reading Faustus’ grimoire.
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