Andrei Rublev

haven't seen it but looks to be kino

Yes

I hate graffiti

I'm always caught off-guard by how brutal that sequence is, you have a good hour of beautiful meditative shots then people start getting butchered. Feels so much more "real" than violence in an action movie.

Rublev's conversation with Theophanes after the Tartars have left is one of my favorite parts, when he says he has nothing more to say to mankind.

>movies atheist could never understand
This kind of movie would be banned today.

Malick is still making films though.

How do you not get it? It represents the pursuit of artistry, achievement, and humanity itself. It's the peak and the thesis of the film

No it isn't and no it wouldn't, relax sweaty

based phoneposting zoomer

I got the achievement aspect since he breaks down due to the stress of not knowing whether it would work, but it always felt like a jarring shift since the character comes out of nowhere and Rublev inexplicably becomes a background character in his project.