Four Seasons (1975) Poster

(1975)

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8/10
indelible images
mjneu5921 November 2010
Armenian filmmaker Artavazd Peleshian has already been compared to Dziga Vertov, Bruce Connor, and the young Werner Herzog, but on the evidence of this brief featurette (it's only 30-minutes long) he emerges as a unique, exciting discovery in his own right. His work is almost impossible to describe, except (inadequately) as non-narrative short subjects, a blanket category which says nothing about the visceral impact of both pieces in the program I attended, during the 1987 San Francisco International Film Festival (where 'The Four Seasons' screened alongside Peleshian's 'In the Beginning').

'The Four Seasons' presents a series of hypnotic and powerful images from his native country: of shepherds and their flocks fording a torrential mountain river, and farmers grappling with what look like huge haystacks on a near-vertical mountainside. 'In The Beginning', equally spectacular, is a quick, kinetic flow of brilliantly edited found footage: crowds running; armies colliding; masses in motion, repeated, reversed, and freeze-framed in dizzy choreographed rhythms.

In each film the emphasis is more on the poetry of the montage itself rather than on any premeditated message, making them easy on the eyes as well as fascinating to ponder.
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10/10
Pure poetry.
liviomaynard10 June 2005
I had never seen any of Pelechian's work before I saw "The Seasons" and that was crucial. The film is the closest you can get to written poetry and has such a beauty that grabs your every feeling from the beginning. It's pure visual poetry. I saw other films by Artavazd Pelechian after this one and I could be sure the guy is a master at what he does. "The Seasons" with a slow motion of a man going downstream holding a sheep. Strange? Absolutely NOT. You may wonder at first what he meant by showing people sliding in the snow and a horde of sheeps but by the end or maybe after a second time view, you get it. Unfortunately it can't be described with words. Only the soul can understand.
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4/10
Not good enough for the runtime
Horst_In_Translation27 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Vremena goda" or "Seasons of the Year" is a Soviet documentary film from 1975, so this one is also over 40 years old and was written and directed by Armenian filmmaker Artavazd Peleshian. With most of his works (and maybe that is why they are so well-known today still), neither Russian nor Armenian language are featured in here or just to an extent where it really does not understand if you understand the two or three occasions. It is all about the music in here from the audio perspective. You hear Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" while you watch Armenian shepherds at work. At the end, possibly to close on a high note, we get to witness a wedding. I must say it was okay listening to, but visually I was bored pretty quickly. It may have been a better watch at 10 minutes max instead of almost half an hour. And for the nice music, you can also simply listen to a record. I don't known if you need to be Armenian to appreciate this one, but I give it a thumbs-down. Not recommended.
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