I suppose, in conjunction with the Euro 2012 finals co-hosted by Poland and Ukraine, it is only proper to review a Polish film. Actually, it the movie upon which 'Sliding Doors' (which I discussed earlier) is based on.
Even with excellent subtitles, the first half-hour of the film just whisks by without giving a clue what was going on! Characters were coming and going leaving us wondering what was actually going on.
The story starts with Witek screaming on top of his lungs. In the next scene, bodies of dead people are dragged by doctors and attendants along a hospital corridor, leaving a trail of blood along the way. Then it goes to the time when Witek was a child, and his friend Daniel moves to Denmark. And a young Witek with a girlfriend. A cadaver is dissected in full view of the audience stirring up a medical student who could not stomach the gore. Then we see Witek, a 4th-year medical student, coaxing her, who actually fancies him. Witek's father dies, and Witek, who was doing medicine to fulfil his father's wish, takes a break to reflect on his future. He runs to catch a train, and that is when the real story starts.
While rushing to buy a train ticket, he collides into an elderly lady who drops a coin. The coin is picked by a vagabond who buys a beer. When the drunk savours his excellent fortune and beer, a hasty Witek knocks the drinker and barely made it to the back of the leaving train. He befriends a middle-aged man, Werner, and follows him home. This man is involved in the Communist party movements and probably just out of prison. Witek is coaxed to continue the work that he had failed.
Witek meets his first flame. He also comes to meet a government Minister, Adam, who takes him under his wings.
He is sent to rescue some health personnel who were held hostage by a group of junkies. After successfully saving the day, he is lured into the party's ideology.
He discovers that his first love had been tortured and is now working with an anti-Government group. We also find that Witek had a stillborn twin and his mother died during childbirth. He must have been born during a national disaster. That was the scene shown at the beginning of the film.
Witek's boss, Adam, gets Czuszka arrested for illegal activities. Thinking that Witek snitched on her, she leaves. Witek assaults Adam and tries to flee his country to France but is frustrated that his passport had been withheld. And he screams.....
Next, the scene moves to where Witek runs to catch his train. The same view but this time he knocks the vagabond's beer costing him valuable milliseconds that made him miss his train. He assaults a railway officer who prevents him from running after a speeding train. Witek is incarcerated with community service.
In the third option, Witek misses the train but is not apprehended by the rail guard but waiting at the railway station is his medical school girlfriend, Olga. He returns to med school to complete his training. He marries his girlfriend and is offered to pursue a Ph D in his university. The Dean's son is arrested, and Witek has to replace his boss for a conference in Libya. The plane that he boards via France burst into flames during lift-off! Zakończyć (End, Fin)
It is a somewhat abstractly tricky movie to watch, I had to view it twice to understand what in heaven's name was going on. As the shooting is mostly indoors, one does not get the opportunity to see the landscape of Poland in 1981 (it took 6 years to release due to bureaucratic red tape), Eurozone's one of the poorer cousins. It was shot at a time when the Berlin Wall, Kremlin and the Iron Curtain was about to crumble down giving a knock on Communism ideology leading to its demise and opening the floodgates of economic reforms and globalisation. The purpose of making this film is to express the director's anti-Communist sentiments and to ridicule people's preoccupation with psychoanalysis.
Comments
Post a Comment