The Dante Quartet (1987, Avant-Garde, Short, Animation)
Synopsis
Dante's Divine Comedy depicted as thousands of abstract paintings by Stan Brakhage himself.
The Dante Quartet is an experimental short film by Stan Brakhage, completed in 1987. The film was inspired by Dante's Divine Comedy, and took six years to produce.
This hand-painted work, six years in the making (37 in the study of The Divine Comedy) demonstrates the earthly conditions of ‘Hell’, ‘Purgatory’ (or ‘Transition’), and ‘Heaven’ (or ‘existence is song’, which is the closest I’d presume heaven to be from my experience). – Stan Brakhage.
Visual Effects by: Dan Yanosky
In 2023, IndieWire ranked the film one of the 100 best films of the 1980s, with critic Samantha Bergeson writing, "That its production required a longer dedication of time and effort from Brakhage than shooting Apocalypse Now in croc-infested waters required from Francis Ford Coppola or dragging a boat over a mountain for Fitzcarraldo did from Werner Herzog only adds to the sense of beholding an artist's magnum opus."
About this movie
Title: The Dante Quartet (1987, Avant-Garde, Short, Animation)
Directed by: Stan Brakhage
Date of birth: 14 January 1933, Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
Date of death: 9 March 2003, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Year: 1987
Country: United States
Language: Silent
Color: Color
Runtime: 6 min.