Blunden Habour

Title: Forest of Bliss
Runtime: 90 Minutes
Date: 1986


FOREST OF BLISS
Robert Gardner, 1986

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Forest of Bliss is intended as an unsparing but ultimately redeeming account of the inevitable griefs and frequent happinesses that punctuate daily life in Benares, one of the world's most holy cities. The film unfolds from one sunrise to the next without commentary, subtitles or dialogue. It is an attempt to give anyone who sees it a wholly authentic though greatly magnified view of the matters of life and death that are portrayed.

Of the multitude at work, at play and at prayer, three indivividuals are seen in somewhat greater detail than others. They are a healer of great geniality who attends the pained and troubled, a baleful and untouchable King of the Great Cremation Ground who sells the sacred fire, and an unusually conscientious priest who keeps a small shrine on the banks of the Ganges.

A child who fell from a building flying a kite is buried in the Ganges

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Seeing Forest of Bliss completed, I am quite certain that the animals, especially the dogs, have an importance I merely glimpsed while I was filming. The dogs and, of course, the river.

In 2001, two DVD's entitled MAKING FOREST OF BLISS and LOOKING AT FOREST OF BLISS WITH STAN BRAKHAGE were produced.