Stars:
Marcin Dorocinski, Maciej Stuhr, Sonia BohosiewiczUser Reviews
Flashback headacheIn the autumn of 1943, a
small settlement of Polish partisans located deep into forest territory
attempts to survive the gruesome hardships of everyday life, while
fending off Nazi patrols and their informants. The man for the odd dirty
jobs is eternally mumbling camp executioner Wydra (Marcin Dorocinski),
who disposes of captured soldiers and troublesome compatriots with
ruthless efficiency. When Henryk Kondolewicz (Maciej Stuhr), a local
businessman with shady dealings with SS forces, is pointed out as a
traitor, Wydra is sent to execute him. Meanwhile however the entire camp
is caught unawares by Nazi forces, who arduously murder every man,
woman and child...
Never since "Memento" have flashbacks played
such a vital role in building a feature film. However, in Christopher
Nolan's debut feature the whole cascading jumps to the past served a
higher purpose, while Kryształowicz (similarly this is his first film)
uses it as a ploy to muddle up a plot, which is drearily straightforward
to the extent that most flashbacks don't serve any purpose whatsoever -
failing to expand the characters, story or philosophical tidings.
Rummaging through images of now and then, a barrage of scenes is utterly
pointless, not uncovering any mysteries, just seemingly functioning as a
random choice of a shot to edit in between other sequences. This
approach manages to somehow draw out a 40-odd-minute plot into a languid
100 minute fresco.
Key protagonist Dorociński lazily mumbling
through his lines does not help proceedings, for the first time ever
whilst watching a Polish film I found myself contemplating the need for
subtitles just to understand dialogues. Dorociński was the worst
culprit, but unfortunately such laborious, uninterested delivery devoid
of focus on enunciation is the bane of current Polish cinema, never
however has it been such a problematic viewing issue. That said
Dorociński delivers a very suggestive, high-quality performance, and his
apathetic laggard stance seems to serve the character well - an honest
patriot now resigned that his loss of humanity is a necessary sacrifice.
Addiotionally
the imagery is sublime, while the meticulous perfection at which
Kryształowicz creates scenes using the full force of nature to underline
the dark intensity of the situation shows that he is a talent to be
watched. The story became somewhat undone by the lack of content and the
somewhat gruesome over-exaggeration near its end, that unexpectedly
throws us into "Inglorious Basterds" territory and causes the movie to
further lose focus on is basically a story of how within the logic of
gruesome warfare, good/evil become deranged mirror images. The movie
obviously distances itself for glorifying martyrdom, instead upsetting
with presenting the 'good guys' as unhinged by war atrocities, a far cry
away from the crystal heroes of Hollywood pomposity. This in itself is a
welcome new approach, only possible with a detachment for idolatry,
which often characterised the previous Polish film-making generation.
This new voice, point of view, on the past in Polish cinema is in itself
a very interesting phenomenon, somewhat worth analysing further and
juxtaposing to the big-budget glory pictures still rampant amongst the
older directors.
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