There has been practically no research on how Andrei Tarkovsky’s films were perceived by his contemporaries; nevertheless, this perception was complex and controversial. Tarkovsky himself immensely valued understanding and evaluation of his films-this fact is confirmed by his diaries where he often quotes the audience’s reactions to his work. Among them, he focuses on the reviews that allow him to believe he makes films that appeal to any «normal spectator» (one review is signed like this), who were not so few as bureaucrats and shill critics wanted people to think.
Various types of sources let us conclude that the common perception of Tarkovsky’s films as «elitist» and of their meaning as completely impenetrable for a common spectator can be at least corrected: the strata of viewers who attempted different «readings» of Tarkovsky’s films was wide enough and hardly fit in the strict notion of «elite». It could have been even wider were it not for the cultural and historical circumstances created by the state machine.
Life on the Threshold of Death: The Eschatology of Communism in National Cinema During & After Tarkovsky
The recurrent theme of Andrei Tarkovsky is essentially eschatological. As an artist of the Soviet era, in his work he experienced (explicitly and subtly)
The main narrative of the Russian cinema in the 1920s and 1930s is the end of the previous «chaos» on the threshold of the future «cosmos».
As early as in the 1960s (Paradzhanov, Khutsiyev) and later (Abdrashitov, Averbakh, German, Klimov, Panfilov) the image of the «end of time» showed first signs of crisis-those signs echoed the senescence of the collectivist myth and the national identity that was based on it. By the beginning of the 1980s, the trend had become significantly stronger.
Films by Balabanov, German, Zvyagintsev, and the latest pictures by Konchalovsky have stated the new, transformed problem of the «eschatology of communism» as
Alienation & Happiness: Tarkovsky & After