I've seen woefully little Tark (as all cinefiles call him), and because of my lukewarm reactions to the few I've seen (Solaris, Ivan's Childhood), I haven't actively pursued more. I do have copies of Stalker and Andrei Rublev laying around so I'll get to them eventually. He's definitely an acquired taste - Pat K, you're patience is admirable.
Seen four movies today (my one big achievement - moviewatching is an achievement, right?). No masterpieces in sight:
Humpday (Shelton, 2009) - I know the mumblecore people haven't written an aesthetic dogme manifesto or anything (and they hate to be lumped together under that unfair banner), but would it kill you to get some decent lighting or camera equipment or compositions up in this motherfucker? Also, the premise is shaky at best. Has it moments.
Zombieland (Fleischer, 2009) - I can't stand that Eisenberg kid, what a bore. And either he plays the exact same character as in Adventureland (in which case the credits should've said "based on characters by Greg Mottola" or something), or he's a very limited actor. I suspect it's both!
Jennifer's Body (Kusama, 2009) - Like Mark Kermode said, this might prove to the best work of Megan Foxxx's career. Anyway, it's pretty silly, way better than Juno, and Amanda Seyfried is very good.
Accident (Losey, 1967) - Filling some Losey gaps as part of my upcoming 60s Top 100 listmaking. This is no Servant, but it's pretty good. At times very subtle. Harold Pinter, who wrote the script, has a great cameo as a real "Pinter character" - a bullying TV producer with rapid-fire, aggressive dialogue.