Published in 1864, Fyodor Dostoevskyâs Notes from the Underground has a reputation as the first existentialist novel. It established a template for the genre with a portrait of an isolated man contemptuous of the sordid society around him, paralyzed by doubt, and obsessed with the pain and absurdity of his own existence. Also true to form, the narrative, though it has a plot of sorts, does not redeem its hero in any sense or offer any resolution to his gnawing inner conflict, concluding, literally, as an unfinished text. Thirteen years later, the great Russian writer, his health in decline but his literary reputation and financial prospects much improved, wrote a similar story, âThe Dream of a Ridiculous Man.â
In this tale, an unnamed narrator also meditates on his absurd state, to the point of suicide. But he observes this spiritual malaise at a distance, recalling the story as an older man from a vantage point of wisdom: âI am a ridiculous person,â the story begins, âNow they call me a madman. That would be a promotion if it were not that I remain as ridiculous in their eyes as before. But now I do not resent it, they are all dear to me now.â This character, unlike Dostoevskyâs bitter underground man, has had a transformative experienceâa dream in which he experiences the full moral weight of his choices on a grand scale. In a moment of instant enlightenment, our protagonist becomes a kinder, more humane person concerned with the welfare of others.
It is the difference between these two tales which makes the static, internal Underground a very difficult story to adapt to the screenâas far as I know it hasnât been doneâand âRidiculous Man,â with its vivid dream imagery and dynamic characterization, almost ideal. The 1992 animation (in two parts above) uses painstakingly hand-painted cells to bring to life the alternate world the narrator finds himself navigating in his dream. From the flickering lamps against the dreary, darkened cityscape of the ridiculous manâs waking life to the shifting, sunlit sands of the dreamworld, each detail of the story is finely rendered with meticulous care. Drawn and directed by Russian animator Alexander Petrovâwho won an Academy Award for his 1999 adaptation of Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Seaâthis is clearly a labor of love, and of tremendous skill and patience.
The technique Petrov uses, writes Galina Saubanova, is one ofâFinger Paintingâ: âForcing the paint on the glass, the artist draws with his fingers, using brushes only in exceptional cases. One figure is one film frame, which flashes within 1/24 of a second while watching. Petrov draws more than a thousand paintings for one minute of his film.â In Russian with English subtitles taken from Constance Garnettâs translation, the twenty-minute âanimated paintingâ sublimely realizes Dostoevskyâs tale of personal transformation with a lightness and lyricism that a live-action film cannot duplicate, although a 1990 BBC production called âThe Dreamâ certainly has much to recommend it. If you like Petrovâs work, be sure to watch his Old Man and the Sea here. Also online are his short films âThe Mermaidâ (1997) and âMy Loveâ (2006).
Related Content:
See a Beautifully Hand-Painted Animation of Ernest Hemingwayâs The Old Man and the Sea (1999)
Watch Piotr Dumalaâs Wonderful Animations of Literary Works by Kafka and Dostoevsky
Two Beautifully-Crafted Russian Animations of Chekhovâs Classic Childrenâs Story âKashtankaâ
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
Watch a Hand-Painted Animation of Dostoevsky’s “The Dream of a Ridiculous Man” is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Watch a Hand-Painted Animation of Dostoevskyâs âThe Dream of a Ridiculous Manâ
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