影像(神圣的或其他的):当代俄罗斯电影中的陀思妥耶夫斯基潜台词

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Anuari de Filologia-Llengues i Literaturas Modernas Pub Date : 2014-11-24 DOI:10.1344/AFLM2014.4.5
Kirsten Rutsala
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文主要关注最近两部俄罗斯电影中的女主角:维拉·斯托罗热娃的《与宠物同行》(Путешествие, домашними животными)(2007)中的纳塔莉亚和安德烈·兹维亚金采夫的《埃琳娜》(Елена)(2011)中的主角。这两个人物都与陀思妥耶夫斯基作品中的人物有着惊人的相似之处,其中包括《温柔的生物》(Кроткая)和《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》。通过分析这两部电影中陀思妥耶夫斯基的意象、人物发展和主题的呼应,我研究了当代俄罗斯电影人如何回应和偏离重要的文化参考和比喻。一项特别富有成效的调查涉及宗教偶像的共同形象。在陀思妥耶夫斯基的虚构世界中,神圣的形象比比皆是,尤其是上帝之母的形象。例如,《温柔的生物》的主人公在自杀时手里拿着一个圣像,这是一种包含绝望和精神解放的模糊行为。虽然《与宠物同行》中的纳塔莉亚是一个真正的无辜的人,但她对不爱丈夫的“罪恶”感到内疚。她咨询的牧师给了她一个天主之母的圣像。然而,与陀思妥耶夫斯基的角色不同,纳塔莉亚并没有屈服于绝望。相反,她尝试了各种形式的解放,从她压抑的过去中解脱出来,最终决定以上帝之母的形象塑造自己。纳塔莉亚从她自己长大的孤儿院收养了一个男孩,我们最后看到她穿着蓝色(与圣母玛利亚有关的颜色),用崇拜的目光凝视着她的新儿子。埃琳娜在丈夫心脏病发作后也向教堂寻求指导,她被告知在上帝之母和圣尼古拉的偶像前放置蜡烛。然而,她试图在教堂找到安慰失败了。虽然她似乎对她的丈夫有真正的感情,但埃琳娜最强烈的情感依恋仍然是她的儿子和孙子。事实上,她对母亲的奉献导致了她的谋杀。纳塔莉亚可能被看作是另一种温柔的生物,她生存下来,茁壮成长,实现了个人独立和情感转变,但埃琳娜代表了一条完全不同的、更黑暗的道路。当这个温柔的生物差点杀死她的丈夫时,在“决斗”的场景中,埃琳娜向我们展示了故事情节的另一种变化:为了拯救她贫穷的儿子和参军的孙子,她杀死了她富有的丈夫。纳塔莉亚代表了一个胜利版的温柔生物,她的母性本能拯救并改变了她,而埃琳娜则成为了一个比陀思妥耶夫斯基笔下的女主角更悲惨的人物。
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IMAGES (HOLY AND OTHERWISE): DOSTOEVSKIAN SUBTEXTS IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIAN CINEMA
This article focuses on the heroines of two recent Russian films: Natalia in Vera Storozheva'ʹs Traveling with Pets ( Путешествие с домашними животными ) (2007) and the title character of Andrei Zviagintsev'ʹs Elena ( Елена ) (2011). Both characters bear striking resemblances to figures from Dostoevsky’s works, among them “A Gentle Creature” (“Кроткая”) and The Brothers Karamazov . By analyzing the echoes of Dostoevskian imagery, character development, and themes in these two films, I investigate how contemporary Russian filmmakers respond to and diverge from significant cultural references and tropes. One particularly fruitful line of inquiry involves the shared imagery of religious icons. Holy images abound in Dostoevsky’s fictional universe, especially the icon of the Mother of God. For instance, the title character of “A Gentle Creature” holds an icon in her hands while committing suicide, an ambiguous act encompassing both despair and spiritual liberation. While Natalia in Traveling with Pets is a true innocent, she experiences guilt for the “sin” of not loving her husband. The priest she consults gives her an icon of the Mother of God. Unlike Dostoevsky’s character, however, Natalia does not succumb to despair. Instead, she experiments with various forms of liberation from her oppressive past, settling finally on modeling herself after the image of the Mother of God. Natalia adopts a boy from the orphanage she herself was raised in, and we last see her dressed in blue (the color associated with the virgin Mary), gazing at her new son with adoration. Elena also seeks guidance from the church after her husband has a heart attack, and she is told to place candles at the icons of the Mother of God and St. Nikolai. However, her attempts to find solace in the church fail. Although she seems to possess genuine affection for her husband, Elena’s strongest emotional attachment remains to her son and grandchildren. Indeed, her dedication to motherhood leads her to commit murder. Natalia may be seen as an alternative version of the gentle creature who survives and thrives, achieving personal independence and emotional transformation, but Elena represents an entirely different and darker path. While the gentle creature comes close to murdering her husband, in the “duel” scene, Elena shows us another variation of the storyline: she does murder her wealthy husband in order to save her son from poverty and her grandson from the army. While Natalia represents a triumphant version of the gentle creature whose maternal instinct saves and transforms her, Elena becomes an even more tragic figure than Dostoevsky’s heroine.
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