
Aleksandr Sokurov
Biography
Aleksandr Sokurov (born June 14, 1951) is a Russian director of avant-garde and independent films that have won him international acclaim. Described as a heir to Tarkovsky, spare, gloomy and contemplative, he often blurs lines between image and world. His noticable trademark and style includes long, accurate shots of real painterly compositions, disorted field of view, zooms and use of wide angle lenses. Often plotless with emphasis on aesthetics and impressionism his films are noted for philosophical approach to history and nature. Sokurov underlines the importance of film, not to yield to the modern audience laziness, and to stay away from mere entertainment. His most significant works include a feature film, Russian Ark (2002), filmed in a single unedited shot, Mother and Son (1997) and Faust (2011), which was honoured with the Golden Lion, the highest prize for the best film at the Venice Film Festival.
Filmography

The Last Days of Humanity

Voices in the Old Walls

Francofonia

Voice of Sokurov

The Romanovs: Glory and Fall of the Czars

Film about the film

Alexander Sokurov. Temptation

Agnès Varda: From Here to There

We Need Happiness

The Art of Time

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Lightning strikes a tall tree

Alexander Sokurov: Questions about cinema

Sokurov

Elegy of Life: Rostropovich, Vishnevskaya

In One Breath: Alexander Sokurov's Russian Ark

Kira

Russian Ark

Elegy of a Voyage

The Knot

The Diary of St. Petersburg: Kozintsev's Flat

The Diary of St. Petersburg: Inauguration of the Monument to Dostoevsky

Robert. A Fortunate Life

Edward Shelganov visiting Sokurov

Oriental Elegy

A Soldier's Dream

An Example of Intonation

Simple Elegy

Leningrad Retrospective

Soviet Elegy

Petersburg Elegy

Moscow Elegy

And Nothing More

You Should Survive

Петербургский дневник: Квартира Козинцева
