- Author: Geoff Dyer
- Publisher: Pantheon Books
- Published: February 2012
- ISBN-10: 0307377385
- ISBN-13: 9780307377388
- Format: Hardcover
- Copyright: 2012
- Subject: FILM & DRAMA
Zona: A Book about a Film about a Journey to a Room
By Geoff Dyer
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Product Description
In Zona, Geoff Dyer (Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi, Otherwise Known as the Human Condition) attempts to unlock the mysteries of a film that has haunted him ever since he first saw it thirty years ago: Andrei Tarkovsky’s “Stalker”, widely regarded as one of the greatest films of all time. Dyer guides readers into the zone of Tarkovsky’s imagination where it realized that the film is only the entry point for a radically original investigation of the enduring questions of life, faith, and how to live. In a narrative that gives free rein to the brilliance of Geoff Dyer’s distinctive voice – acute observation, melancholy, comedy, lyricism, and occasional ill-temper, Zona produces an unpredictable journey in which we try to fathom and realize our deepest wishes. Notes. 228p.
Editorial Reviews
A personal meditation on Andrei Tarkovsky's 1979 film Stalker--though, this being a Dyer (Otherwise Known as the Human Condition, 2011, etc.) book, it's about plenty more besides. Stalker is a relatively obscure entry in Russian director Tarkovsky's oeuvre, but it's exceedingly receptive to critical analysis. The film follows three archetypes--Writer, Professor and Stalker--in a mysterious and heavily guarded wilderness as they ponder the meaning of life. Dyer doesn't provide a critical analysis of the film so much as a scene-by-scene walkthrough of it, just to see where it takes him--which is pretty far. He riffs on The Last of the Mohicans, Chernobyl, his affinity for particular brands of knapsack, the effect of aging on one's enthusiasm for cultural consumption, and more. At his most far-flung, he recalls his squandered opportunities for ménages à trois. Such digressions are vintage Dyer: Inserted as footnotes or parentheticals, they sometimes go on for so long that it can be hard to recall the scene in the movie that prompted the comment in the first place. He delivers a few too many hokey puns, and he sometimes overreaches to argue for the film's ongoing influence. (A claim that the film works as a 9/11 allegory is particularly forced.) The lack of a strong thesis is frustrating, and ultimately this is a lesser Dyer book. However, it gets over on his enthusiasm for the film and on his infectious admiration of Tarkovsky's philosophical reach. The "room" at the center of Stalker represents our need to locate our deepest desires, Dyer explains, and in that context maybe talking about those failed three-ways was necessary after all. A digressive but impassioned mash note to a film that defies easy summary. Copyright Kirkus 2012 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
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