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Sátántangó by Béla Tarr
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Sátántangó
by Béla Tarr
4K Restored Version

Based on the book by László Krasznahorkai, Sátántangó follows members of a small, defunct agricultural collective living in a post-apocalyptic landscape after the fall of Communism who, on the heels of a large financial windfall, set out to leave their village. As a few of the villagers secretly conspire to take off with all of the earnings for themselves, a mysterious character, long thought dead, returns to the village, altering the course of everyone’s lives forever.


            
Original Title: Sátántangó
Countries: Hungary, Switzerland, Germany
Year: 1994
Ratio: 1.66:1
Sound: Stereo
Length: 439 min
Language: Hungarian
Festivals & Awards
1994
  • Toronto International Film Festival
  • Locarno International Film Festival
  • Berlin International Film Festival – Forum – Caligari Film Award
About Director
Béla Tarr

Born in 1955, Pécs, Hungary.

He began his career at sixteen as an amateur filmmaker. Later he worked at Balázs Béla Stúdió, the most important workshop of Hungarian experimental film, where he made his feature directorial debut. Tarr was the student of the Academy of Theatre and Film (Színház- és Filmművészeti Egyetem) in Budapest between 1977 and 1981. In 1981 he was one of the founders of Társulás Filmstúdió, since its closure in 1985 he has worked as an independent filmmaker. In 1989 and 1990 he lived in Berlin as a guest of the DAAD Berliner Künstlerprogram, between 1990 and 2011 he was an associate professor at the DFFB in Berlin, Germany. He became the member of the European Film Academy in 1997.

In 2003 he founded TT Filmműhely, an independent film workshop which was led by him until 2011. TT Filmműhely produced his latest films and Tarr acted as producer on other remarkable filmmakers’ movies.

The international film school Film.factory in Sarajevo was founded by Tarr in 2012; he was the head of programme and professor till 2016.

Tarr is a visiting professor at several film academies. In 2017 at Eye Filmmuseum, Amsterdam he developed an exhibition, Till the End of the World, that is a cross between a film, a theatre set and an installation.

He is the president of the Hungarian Filmmakers’ Association, member of the Széchenyi Academy of Letters and Arts, has been given the most prestigious Hungarian prize for artists, the Kossuth Prize and the Hungarian prize for filmmakers, Balázs Béla Prize.

He was named a Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres and was honoured with several remarkable national, international awards, honorary doctorates and life achievement awards.

FILMOGRAPHY
  • The Turin Horse – 2011
  • The Man From London – 2007
  • Werckmeister Harmonies – 2000
  • Sátántangó – 1994
  • Damnation – 1988
  • Almanach of Fall – 1985
  • The Prefab People – 1982
  • The Outsider – 1981
  • Family Nest – 1977
Cast & Crew
Cast

Mihály Vig
Putyi Horváth

Crew

Screenwriter: László Krasznahorkai
DOP: Gabor Medvigy
Editor: Agnes Hranitzky
Music: Mihály Vig
Production: Mozgókép Innovációs Társulás és Alapítvány
4k restoration: Arbelos Films, The Hungarian Filmlab
World Sales: Luxbox

“'Satan’s Tango' is a magnum opus to end all magna opera, a dark, funny, apocalyptic allegory of the Hungarian psyche that stimulates, irritates, soothes and startles with blinding strokes of genius in equal turn.”