Béla Tarr
Directing · Born 1955-07-21 in Pécs, Hungary
Biography
Béla Tarr (July 21, 1955 – January 6, 2026) was a Hungarian filmmaker. Much of his work is marked by philosophical elements and a pessimistic view of humanity. His films utilize unconventional storytelling methods, such as long takes and/or non-professional actors to achieve realism. Debuting with Family Nest in 1979, Tarr underwent a period of what he refers to as "social cinema", aimed at telling mundane stories about ordinary people, often in the style of cinema vérité. Over the next decade, the cinematography of Tarr's films gradually changed; Damnation (1988) was shot with languid camera movement aimed at establishing ambience. It marked Tarr's earliest experimentation with philosophical themes, focused mostly on bleak and desolate representations of reality. Sátántangó (1994) and…
Filmography
- Tarr Béla: I Used to Be a Filmmaker as Himself
- The Doctor's Pupil
- About Cinema as Self
- 365 Day Project as Self
- The State That I Am Fish as Béla Tarr
- Season of Monsters