Elena Ferrante: ‘Solaris is not Tarkovsky’s best film, but it made the greatest impression on me’

Solaris is astonishing because the book that inspired it doesn’t seem to contain Tarkovsky’s film

A film that I watch at least once a year is Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris. I’ve loved all of Tarkovsky’s works, even the most difficult. Some I’ve seen in the cinema, others on television. I saw Andrei Rublev at the cinema, and on the big screen it was astonishing, its black-and-white extraordinary: I’ll probably never see it again in a cinema, but I hope that young people will have the opportunity.

I also saw Solaris on the big screen – not Tarkovsky’s best film, but the one that made the greatest impression on me. I remember that it was advertised as the Soviet answer to 2001: A Space Odyssey – a completely misleading slogan. To see in it a cinematic contest between the US and the USSR was as silly as it was misleading. Kubrick’s marvellous film, with its imaginative force, would certainly win. But it doesn’t have even a hint of the desperation, of the sense of loss, that dominates Solaris.

Related: Elena Ferrante: ‘I love upheaval. As a child, I would rush out into a storm’

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Published on August 31, 2018 23:00
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message 1: by Irena (new)

Irena Pasvinter Solaris is my favorite of Tarkovsky's movies in my order of preferences and probably also the most accessible for the audience. The Soviet answer to "2001: A Space Odyssey"? Reminds me of other absurd comparisons of this kind: "Adriano Celentano is Italian Serge Gainsbourg", "Michel Blanc is French Woody Allen" etc.


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