For some inexplicable reason, I had somehow never seen Andrei Tarkovsky's 1972 film Solaris. I certainly wasn't ducking it, and I've liked the other films of his that I've seen (Mirror, Stalker). Anyway, I found got around to watching Solaris, and I will doubtless be watching or re-watching his other films (happily, the Criterion Channel has a healthy lineup of Tarkovsky films). Like his other films, Solaris is complex and challenging, and at the end you're not quite certain what you just saw, but you're awfully glad that you made the journey. It's science fiction, and the purest form of science fiction, that is, asking difficult questions and not relying upon shallow special effects (that is, US science fiction). Psychologist Kris Kelvin (Donatas Banionis) heads to Solaris to figure out why the scientists there are experiences bizarre hallucinations, only to find that his dead wife Hari (Natalya Bondarchuk) keeps returning from the dead and committing suicide. There's a lot of rumination on memory and loss and meaning, thus classic Tarkovsky. Highly recommended. Mirror and Stalker are back in my queue, along with Tarkovsky films I haven't seen.






