Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 2011


Samsara (2011 film)

Buy Samsara (2011 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Samsara' is a 2011 American non-narrative documentary film of international imagery directed by Ron Fricke and produced by Mark Magidson, who also collaborated on 'Baraka' (1992), a film of a similar vein, and 'Chronos' (1985).

Completed over a period of five years in 25 countries around the world, it was shot in 70 mm format and output to digital format. The film premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival and received a limited release in August 2012.

Synopsis



The official website describes, "Expanding on the themes they developed in 'Baraka' (1992) and 'Chronos' (1985), 'Samsara' explores the wonders of our world from the mundane to the miraculous, looking into the unfathomable reaches of humanity's spirituality and the human experience. Neither a traditional documentary nor a travelogue, Samsara takes the form of a nonverbal, guided meditation."

Production



'Samsara' is directed by Ron Fricke and produced by Mark Magidson. The pair had collaborated on 'Baraka' (1992) and reunited in 2006 to plan 'Samsara'. They researched locations that would fit the conceptual imagery of sasra, to them "meaning 'birth, death and rebirth' or 'impermanence'". They gathered research from people's works and photo books as well as the Internet and YouTube, resources not available at the time of planning 'Baraka'. They considered using digital cameras but decided to film in 70 mm instead, considering its quality superior. Fricke and Magidson began filming 'Samsara' the following year. Filming lasted for more than four years and took place in 25 countries across five continents. Three years into filming, the pair began assembling the film and editing it. They pursued several pick-up shoots to augment the final product.

The crew used three 70 mm cameras for filming; two cameras manufactured by Panavision and one specialty time-lapse camera designed by Fricke. While the scenes were captured on 65 mm negative film, they were output to Digital Cinema Package (DCP), a digital output. Magidson described the process, "We're doing a combination of what we think is the best of both technologies, the best way to image capture and then the best way to output. Once we get into the digital environment, we're able to refine the imagery, we're able to save shots that we'd have to otherwise trash really for various reasons." Where they cut their negatives for 'Baraka', the negatives for 'Samsara' were scanned then worked on digitally. The pair used the Telecine process to format the film to ProRes for the editing process and used Final Cut for editing.

The crew shot from a bird's-eye view a scene of pilgrims surrounding the Kaaba in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. A 40-floor building was recently constructed next to the mosque that surrounded the Kaaba, so the filmmakers were able to film the pilgrims with permission of the building's owner.

Music

The score was composed by Michael Stearns, Lisa Gerrard and Marcello De Francisci. Stearns previously collaborated with the filmmakers on 'Baraka' and 'Chronos', and Gerrard on 'Baraka'. Unlike 'Baraka', 'Samsara' was edited without music, and the composers worked on numerous sequences as separate pieces, before connecting. Magidson explained of the pieces, "It's a piece of music you can listen to as music as well that interprets their feelings to know that imagery in that sequence visually, so they're kind of interpreting it musically." The scoring process lasted between six and seven months.

Filming locations

'Samsara' was filmed in nearly one hundred locations across 25 countries over the course of exactly five years. Some locations include: Angola, Brazil, China, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, France, Ghana, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Israel/Palestine, Italy, Japan, Mali, Myanmar, Namibia, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and United States.

;Africa

'Angola'

* Epupa Falls

'Egypt'

* Egyptian Museum, Cairo

* Great pyramids of Giza

* City of the Dead, Cairo

'Ethiopia'

* Mursi village, Omo Valley

'Ghana'

* Kane Kwei Carpentry Workshop, "Sodom ang Gomorrah", Osu Accra

'Mali'

* Great Mosque of Djenn

* Dogon Village, Bandiagara Escarpment

* Cliff Dwellings near Terelli

'Namibia'

* Sossusvlei Namib-Naukluft National Park

* Lderitz Kolmanskop

* Himba village, Kunene

* Skeleton Coast

;Asia

'China'

* Tagou Martial Arts School, Zhengzhou

* Shanghai

* Changchun City, Jilin Province

* Zhangzhou City, Fujian Province

* Beijing (1000 Hands Dance)

'Hong Kong'

*Lan Kwai Fong Hotel

'India'

* Thikse Monastery, Leh, Ladakh

'Indonesia'

* Tri Pusaka Sakti Art Foundation

* Kawah Ijen Sulfur Mine, East Java

'Israel and Palestinian Territories'

* Nablus Checkpoint, Nablus

* Bethlehem

* Dome of the Rock, East Jerusalem

* Church of the Redeemer, East Jerusalem

* Western Wall, East Jerusalem

'Japan'

* Lotte Kasai driving range, Chiba

* YK Tsuchiya Shokai Doll Factory, Tokyo

* Osaka University

* Atri, Kyoto

* Fushimi Inari Shrine, Kyoto

* Toshimaen/Hydropolis, Tokyo

* Yoyogi Park, Tokyo

* Orient Kogyo Showroom, Tokyo

* Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International ATR, Tokyo

'Jordan'

* Petra

'Myanmar'

* Bagan, Mandalay

* Mount Popa, Popa Taungkalat Monastery

* Mingun temple

'Philippines'

* Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center (CPDRC Dancing Inmates), Cebu City

* Payatas Trash Dump, Quezon City

* Arms Corporation of the Philippines

* Manila Streets

'Saudi Arabia'

* Al-Masjid al-Haram, Mecca

'South Korea'

* Demilitarized zone, Panmunjom

* Hyundai Glovis, Co. Ltd Shipyards, Seoul

'Thailand'

* Cascade Go-Go Bar, Nana Plaza, Bangkok

* Siriraj Medical Museum, Bangkok

'Turkey'

* Mount Nemrut National Park, Adyaman

* Cappadocia

* Sultan Ahmed Mosque, Istanbul

'United Arab Emirates'

* Ski Dubai

* Dubai Mall

* Burj Khalifa

* Burj Al Arab Hotel

* Palm Island Development

;Europe

'Denmark'

* Moesgrd Museum

* Silkeborg Museum

* Mariesminde Poultry Farm

* Bgely Svineproduktion

'France'

* Chteau de Versailles

* La Sainte-Chapelle, Paris

* Mont-Saint-Michel

* Cathedral Notre-Dame de Paris, Paris

* Cathedral Notre Dame de Reims

* Paris Mtro

* Mont Blanc

* Aiguille du Midi

* Olivier de Sagazan, Paris

'Italy'

* Mont Blanc

* Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, Milan

* Teatro alla Scala, Milan

* Catacombe dei Cappuccini, Palermo

* St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican City

;The Americas

'Brazil'

* Divino Salvador Church, So Paulo

* S Metro Station, So Paulo

* Paraispolis favela, So Paulo

'United States'

* Carnegie Hall

* Times Square

* Hunts Mesa, Monument Valley, Arizona

* Antelope Canyon, Arizona

* Klauea volcano, Hawaii

* Ninth Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana

* Delicate Arch, Arches National Park, Utah

* El Capitan, Yosemite National Park, California

* Mono Lake, Mono Basin, California

* Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia

Themes



Fricke and Magidson emphasized avoiding a particular political view in assembling the film. Fricke said, "We just try to keep it in the middle and then we form little blocks of content and then we set them aside until we have enough. We did all of this without music or sound effects. We just let the image guide the flow and then we started stringing the blocks together." Nicolas Rapold of 'The New York Times' wrote that Samsara's lack of a specific message is "a departure from similarly expansive, globally conscious nonfiction films in vogue now, like the critically acclaimed work of Michael Glawogger ('Workingman's Death,' which depicts the same sulfur mines as 'Samsara') and Nikolaus Geyrhalter ('Abendland') that also serve as probing sociological critique."Rapold, Nicolas. "Planetary Poetry, Women into a Movie: 'Samsara,' Ron Fricke's Cinematic Portrait of the Globe." New York Times. 'NYTimes.com', 17 Aug. 2012. https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/19/movies/samsara-ron-frickes-cinematic-portrait-of-the-globe.html

Release



Box office

'Samsara' premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2011. In March 2012, Oscilloscope Laboratories acquired the rights to distribute 'Samsara' in the United States. The film had a limited release in two theaters on , 2012. By its fifth weekend (September 1416), 'Samsara' had expanded to 60 theaters and achieved the highest-grossing documentary release of 2012. On , distributor Oscilloscope Laboratories announced that at $1.8 million in box office earnings, 'Samsara' had become the highest-grossing film in Oscilloscope's (relatively short) history.

Critical reception

Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 76% based on reviews from 79 critics and reports a rating average of 7.00/10. It reports the critics' consensus that "it's a tad heavy-handed in its message, but Samsara's overwhelmingly beautiful visuals more than compensate for any narrative flaws." At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 65% based on 23 reviews, reflecting "generally favorable reviews."

Kenneth Turan, reviewing for the 'Los Angeles Times', called 'Samsara' "as frustrating as it is beautiful." Turan expressed frustration that the filmmakers did not name the more obscure locations, such as the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center in the Philippines. The critic also took issue with some of the film's "disconcerting" images. Turan concluded, "Some of the connections made are too obvious, like following images of ammunition with a portrait of a severely wounded veteran, while others are completely elusive. Shots of the devastation Katrina left behind in New Orleans are beautifully spooky, but does it say anything useful to follow that with images of Versailles? The makers of 'Samsara' want to free our minds, but their technique makes us their prisoners more often than not."

In the 'Chicago Sun-Times', Roger Ebert awarded 'Samsara' a full four stars, writing that it provided "an uplifting experience" through its use "of powerful images, most magnificent, some shocking, all photographed with great care in the highest possible HD resolution." Ebert extolled the film's capturing of images of what may eventually be lost to humanity and noted that there were also images that could reflect the reason for these losses. Katie Walsh, writing for indieWire's 'The Playlist', applauded 'Samsara's "technical achievements" and noted that the film used the "intellectual montage" technique. Walsh said the film was similar to 'Man with a Movie Camera', but took "the idea to new global and spiritual heights." She said of the film's entirety, "While one can discuss the technical prowess of these shocking and beautiful images, it doesn't do justice to the spiritual cinematic power of this work."

See also



* 'Baraka (film)'

* 'Chronos (film)'

* 'Qatsi trilogy'

* List of films with longest production time

References




Buy Samsara (2011 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 2011



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1108276675.