Satantango

E774349

Satantango is a 1994 Hungarian black-and-white art film directed by Béla Tarr, renowned for its seven-hour runtime, long takes, and bleak, atmospheric portrayal of a collapsing rural community.

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Hungarian film
film
authorOfSourceWork László Krasznahorkai NERFINISHED
basedOn Sátántangó (novel) NERFINISHED
castMember Erika Bók NERFINISHED
László feLugossy NERFINISHED
Mihály Víg NERFINISHED
Putyi Horváth NERFINISHED
cinematographer Gábor Medvigy NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Hungary NERFINISHED
criticalReception acclaimed
director Béla Tarr NERFINISHED
distributor Mokép NERFINISHED
editedBy Mihály Víg NERFINISHED
festivalScreening Berlin International Film Festival NERFINISHED
filmingPeriod early 1990s
format black-and-white
genre art film
drama film
hasCultFollowing true
hasIntermission true
includedInList Sight & Sound greatest films polls NERFINISHED
influenced slow cinema movement
isBlackAndWhite true
leadActor Mihály Víg NERFINISHED
musicBy Mihály Víg NERFINISHED
narrativeStructure nonlinear
notableFor bleak atmosphere
long takes
slow cinema style
very long runtime
numberOfParts 12
originalLanguage Hungarian
portrays life in a decaying collective farm
productionCompany Társulás Filmstúdió NERFINISHED
releaseYear 1994
runtimeMinutes 439
screenwriter Béla Tarr NERFINISHED
László Krasznahorkai NERFINISHED
setting rural Hungary
structureInspiredBy tango steps
style long takes
minimalist dialogue
slow pacing
theme collapse of a rural community
moral decay
post-communist disillusionment
title Sátántangó NERFINISHED

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Béla Tarr notableWork Satantango
Hungarian cinema notableFilm Satantango