Anna Eriksson E In Tarkovsky’s The Sacrifice of Time , Tarkovsky recalls Ovid and Engels: “Ovid wrote that art lies in not being noticed” and “Engels emphasized that the better the creator’s vision is hidden, the better for the work of art.” Anna Eriksson’s film E is brilliantly lingering and unflinchingly bold, even witty. In her films, Eriksson relies on strong visuality, the subconscious, and the inexhaustible flow of associations. In her latest film E , Eva Volger (Anna Eriksson), as the Prime Minister of Finland, performs an anasyrma at a Nobel ceremony. In ancient Greece, an anasyrma was seen as a symbolic gesture conveying power and shock—one that exposes, unsettles, and forces the audience to confront a reality that the spectacle seeks to conceal. Next, we see Eva Volger wandering in the desert. Soon, her answering machine is flooded with messages. Thes...