Andrei Tarkovsky (1932-1986) was one of the great poets of world cinema.
A fiercely independent artist, Tarkovsky crafted poignantly beautiful
films that have proven inscrutable and been bitterly disputed. These
qualities are present in abundance in Andrei Rublev (1966),
Tarkovsky's first fully mature film. Ostensibly a biographical study of
Russia's most famous medieval icon-painter, Andrei Rublev is both
lyrical and epic, starkly naturalistic and allegorical, authentically
historical and urgently topical. While much remains mysterious in Andrei
Rublev, critics have recently begun to reappraise it as a groundbreaking
film that undermines comfortable notions of life and spirituality.
Robert Bird's multifaceted account of Andrei Rublev extends this
reevaluation of Tarkovsky's radical aesthetic by establishing the film's
historical context and presenting a substantially new reading of key
scenes. Bird definitively establishes the film's tortured textual
history, which has resulted in two vastly different versions. He relates
the film to traditions in Russian art and intellectual history, but
finally his analysis focuses on Andrei Rublev as a visual and
narrative artwork that treats profound existential questions by
challenging conventional notions of representation and vision.