• Source: The Suspended Step of the Stork
    • The Suspended Step of the Stork (Greek: Το Mετέωρο Bήμα Tου Πελαργού, translit. To Meteoro Vima Tou Pelargou) is a 1991 Greek film directed by Theodoros Angelopoulos. It was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.


      Cast


      Marcello Mastroianni as Missing Politician
      Jeanne Moreau as The Woman
      Gregory Patrikareas as Alexandre the Reporter (as Gregory Karr)
      Ilias Logothetis as Colonel
      Dora Hrisikou as The Girl
      Vassilis Bouyiouklakis as Production Manager
      Dimitris Poulikakos as Chief Photographer
      Gerasimos Skiadaressis as Waiter
      Tasos Apostolou as Perchman
      Akis Sakellariou as Sound Operator
      Athinodoros Prousalis as Hotel-keeper
      Mihalis Giannatos as Shopkeeper
      Christoforos Nezer as Parliament's President
      Yilmaz Hassan as Hanged Man
      Benjamin Ritter as Sound Operator


      Plot


      A journalist (Gregory Patrick Karr) is in a town on the border of Greece where refugees await approval of their papers. He notices an old man (Marcello Mastroianni) whom he suspects is a famous politician who, years ago, disappeared without a trace. He works to uncover the man's story, meeting one of his old lovers (Jeanne Moreau) in the process.


      Themes


      The film explores the concept of borders, specifically in relation to the history of the Balkans. In The films of Theo Angelopoulos: A Cinema of Contemplation, Andrew Horton writes that the images in Suspended Step "force us to meditate, in a clearer light, on the concept of borders and the territories-geographical, cultural, political, and personal-they lock in and out." He likens the structure of the film to that of Citizen Kane, noting that in Angelopoulos' film the reporter is a more individualized character. In Suspended Step, the journalist does not discover his "Rosebud", but rather gains an appreciation of the possibility of a new humanism in the process of border crossing. The final shot of the reporter watching phone lines being built embodies this idea, "offering the healing touch of movement beyond boundaries."


      Reception


      New York Times critic Caryn James noted that although The Suspended Step of the Stork has "all the elements of a first-rate Angelopoulos film", it suffers from a "bland, banal" protagonist that "dissolves suspense wherever he turns." Though they offer praise for Mastroianni's performance, James refers to the film as "uneven" and "strained".


      References




      External links


      The Suspended Step of the Stork at IMDb

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: