(You probably knew, but Satantango is already out, albeit not by Criterion.)
I think it quickly went out of print.
Artificial Eye released it as a 3 disc set in late 2006, and it's still very much available. (R2)
I ended up buying this Artifical Eye version of Bela Tarr's
Satantango and finished watching it tonight (it took about 3 nights)
Here are some of the imdb keywords for this 7 1/2 hour film:
Animal Abuse
Long Take
Countryside
Hopelessness
Poverty
So yeah, some of it was kinda funny.
No kidding. Among other things, you get a mix of some of the most punishing sequences I've ever seen and some wicked satire (the non-funny kind). One character babbles the same piece of exposition for at least 6-8 minutes straight. There's a drunken, accordian-fueled, barroom dance sequence that went on SO GODDAMN LONG that I was giddily cracking up. A fat, wheezing, alcoholic, shut-in doctor goes out in the rain to buy brandy... this takes almost
an hour.
I think because the running time is so enormous I was able to settle in and adjust to the slow pace better than I have with a lot of 90-120 minute films (including Tarr's own
Werckmeister Harmonies). The B&W cinematography looks amazing, and the sound design noticeably sticks out as being effective.
Ultimately, I had to speed up a few of these scenes, but not many. One that I did have to fast forward through was the unnervingly ugly little girl tormenting the cat. I was somewhat relieved to find out there was a vet present and it now lives with Tarr (so it certainly fared better than the horse in
Andrei Rublev, at least).
This film is a singular experience, to say the least, and a worthwhile one, if they ever put out a decent US dvd.