This 96-minute film was shot in one take, using one camera, throughout
the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia. That one take brought the
camera through 35 rooms of the Hermitage and has thousands of actors
re-enacting events occuring across 4 centuries of history.
Russian Ark follows the Narrator as he explores the Hermitage
(and we get to see his point of view through the camera). The Narrator
doesn't know how he arrived there, but he soon realizes that he is in
the 1700s. After wandering for a bit in the palace, seemingly invisible
to the crowd around him, he runs into another person who seems to be
sharing the exploration. The Narrator, along with the newly introduced
Frenchman, explore the mansion together, travelling through many time
periods as they move from room to room, seeing and interacting with
many important events in Russian history.
Technically, this film is amazing. It is hard to imagine the
logisitical nightmare it must have been to film this beast, and the
director, cinematographer, and crew deserve to be applauded for pulling
it off so well. Anyone who enjoys film or is interested in technique
would likewise be appreciative .
The subtitles seemed to be lacking in certain spots: while the dialogue
between the Narrator and Marquis was pretty well covered, but lots of
the incidental conversation behind them was completely lost. While this
is to be expected in a subtitled film, there were streaks where the two
primary actors were silent, the camera was pointed directly at actors
engaged in dialogue, and no subtitles were to be found.
In addition, I think that some of plot was lost in the translation.
Perhaps the plot was just as ambiguous in Russian, but at times the
mere task of figuring out what was going on was easily distracting from
the action on screen.
Regardless of this minor bitching, this film is
a testament to the quality of modern digital cameras—the 90 minute, no
edit, runtime of the show was only made possible by today's digital
"film" technology. It would be nice to see this film projected in a
digital theater: while it was beautiful transferred to 35mm, it would
probably be even more so projected from the digital master.