| Index | 5 reviews in total |
20 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Death and schizophrenia, 14 January 2004
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Author:
Raúl Quintanilla Alvarado (raulq@hotmail.com) from México
Having seen two other movies by Zulawski, that forgotten artist, I'm
starting to distinguish a style, some themes and his conception of human
emotions. He doesn't care to develop a clear story, he has a way of
surprising us continually through the exploitation of the characters which
cover all the range of emotions. He can take any human and expose them to
supernatural occurrences until they goes mad; they live in a constant
nightmare. His actors occasionally go in a real trance and purge
themselves
of all emotions, crying and laughing simultaneously. It seems as if he is
dissecting humans and beneath all that flesh and terror there lies a
spirit,
alone and in darkness.
Near the end someone cites the Apocalypse, and goes something like this:
and
then they will search for death and they won't find it. And that seems as
the center point to the movies I've seen. In a way you can say he believes
in an eternal return of the soul, but what he longs for is tranquility in
death and so life to him is just a terrible passing, and so it is
occasionally for many.
About the movie, well, it can be mistaken for some supernatural horror
flick, some will be repelled by the style others will embrace it. But to
me
his movies are more of the overall experience and the way they linger in
our
subconscious as an infernal palace which we try to discredit and judge
unreal, but which we inhabit.
11 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Amazing cinematic velocity, 4 August 2007
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Author:
fred-83 from Sweden
Just watched the excellent Second Run DVD release of this film, and I was not disappointed. He must be one of the most underrated directors alive at the moment. In each of his movies (I have only seen two others) he manages to create an amazing cinematic velocity, you are not sure about the meaning and of the plot twists, but you are defenseless against the intensity of the camera-work, editing, performances and staging. He uses film in the way I usually find most interesting, to convey dream states and give fragmented views into other worlds, in that sense he is like Bergman when he was at his best. I can't help comparing the two since Bergmans recent passing and my seeing this film happened almost simultaneously...Watching this film is like experiencing someones nightmare, based in a gritty reality but at the same time far removed from it, and also managing to convey political issues in a non-realistic way. Which is the way I prefer, not ramming it down the audiences throats, but keeping it in the subtext for you to explore if you want.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Hypnotic piece of interpretive art, 19 March 2011
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Author:
tomgillespie2002 from United Kingdom
Remarkably, this was Polish director Andrzej Zulawski's debut feature.
Coming from a family full of actors, directors, poets, writers, and
general great thinkers, Zulawski strides into this film with
confidence, focus and a craft that takes the majority of directors
years to perfect. I was interested in this film after reading about the
rather strange plot line, and having a keen interest in Polish cinema,
notably the work of Roman Polanski and Andrzej Wajda. And I'm pleased
my I followed my curiosity, as the film is a hypnotic and nightmarish
piece of cinema that encourages discussion, interpretation and repeat
viewings, something that I find with only a few films, especially
straight after the first viewing.
The film begins in a remote countryside house in Nazi-occupied Poland,
where Michal (Leszek Teleszynski) stays with his wife and children,
until the Nazis come along a murder everyone while Michal lies hidden
in the woods. He journeys back to Lwow where he joins the resistance,
almost instantly being tracked down and almost murdered. He manages to
escape when the pursuers mistake an innocent bystander wearing similar
clothes to be him and shoot him dead. Michal comforts the dead man's
wife, while noticing that the mysterious woman bears an uncanny
resemblance to his own dead wife. Being a typhus sufferer, Michal
decides to put his misfortune to use and earns money becoming a lice
feeder, strapping small boxes full of the bloodsuckers down his legs to
let them feed, which are later used to develop a vaccine.
What stems from the relatively normal opening scene can only be
described as a chaotic descent into instability, as the story moves
along slowly and confusingly. The decision to use the same actress
(Malgorzata Braunek) to play multiple roles is never clearly explained
or made clear. The obvious and initial reason would apparently be the
inability of Michal to let go of his wife's death, seeing her
everywhere, but as the film goes on, you wonder about the mental
stability of our hero, or even ponder if this (or indeed the whole
film) is just a product of his typhoid-addled brain. Scenes randomly
blend into the next, and you have no idea where the film is going or
will end up. It is truly a mentally tiring experience, and all the
better for it.
Zulawski seems to be fascinated with lice and the feeding process that
the film depicts. He films in close detail, with some effectively
loose- hand held work, how the lice are packed together in a tiny box,
with a mesh screen in place to allow the creatures to feed through.
Later, during the vaccination process, we are treated to a microscope
POV of the lice being carefully placed on a petri dish one by one, only
to be torn open by a pair of tweezers to extract their infected blood.
Do the lice represent our protagonist, or the nature of the human race?
Or perhaps it's a commentary on the war and the destruction of the Nazi
party? No answers are clear with the film, and is best enjoyed as an
interpretive piece of art cinema. I use the word 'enjoy' loosely, as
when the climax approaches, it almost becomes a piece of psychological
horror, one that genuinely disturbs in a way that only a true artist
can achieve.
It will not appeal to everybody, but no matter what your view or
opinion, it will no doubt have a profound effect on the emotions and
the brain, and will linger for a long time.
www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Of Lice and Men, 5 August 2007
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Author:
allenrogerj from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The film begins with a young woman reading from the Book of Revelation. It returns to the same scene again and at the end; in the meantime the film's narration, a strange, hallucinatory circle around the Institute for research into lice in Lwow, the only Polish academic institution the Nazis left open in Poland in the second world war, centring on Michal, the putative father of the young woman's son, Michal's family and the Resistance, circling back to what brought Michal, Marta and his parents to a supposedly safe place. It isn't safe, of course; Michal's mother, Marta and his son are soon killed by German cavalrymen. The film moves back to earlier betrayals and forward to the deaths of Michal, his family and most of the film's characters. We learn- and see- more of the feeding habits of lice than we ever knew before and than most of us would ever want to know and learn more of the resemblances between humans and lice. It might be Michal's fantasy as he suffers from typhus; it might be "reality"; whatever it is this is an astonishing and hallucinatory film. Early Polish films looked at the physical aspects of war; this is about the psychology of it and the psychological effects.
8 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Life at the bottom of a chasm, 5 July 2009
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Author:
oOgiandujaOo from United Kingdom
The Third part of the night is set in Poland during the second world
war, which, as you will probably know, was infested by the plague of
Nazism, and latterly equipollent Communism. The film starts with a
quotation from Revelations Chapter VIII, which delineates the havoc
that will be wreaked upon the earth when the Big Guy decides it's time
to wrap everything up. There are seven trumpets being blown, the first
four we are told about, and they wreak chaotic damage to earth,
generally in thirds: a third of the rivers are turned to wormwood, one
third of ships destroyed... Anyway the fourth trumpet makes it so that
for a third part of the night the moon and stars will not shine, so
that's basically what the German occupation of Poland is, the Third
Part of the Night.
Most of the film is set in the city of Lwow, which was then part of
Poland, but now has been made part of Ukraine and is called Lviv. That
was Joe Stalin's doing, part of his Polish Holocaust.
The film starts though in the countryside with a violent act that is a
quotation of the violence at the start of Menilmontant if I have seen
things correctly. Michal the main character, a ghost-faced unibrowed
typhus sufferer loses his family and returns to Lwow, where he attempts
to become part of the resistance. It turns out that the resistance
centers around a research institute. The folks there exist to feed
lice. The way it works is that you put a strap around your bare leg and
slot in these matchbox size containers full of lice that feed from your
blood through a wire mesh. These lice are used to breed typhus, and the
vaccine is then prepared from their guts. One guy gets home from work,
strips naked and starts scratching himself and whimpering. Not the most
pleasant scene. Involving yourself in this process gave you great
papers though, because the Germans took one look at your papers, and
were then scared of catching typhus from you and so left you well
alone.
After losing his wife, Michal comes across a woman who looks exactly
like her (a plot device Zulawski also uses in La Femme Publique). It's
not clear why this device is used, but it could be a misogynist motif,
ie. he's incapable of seeing the woman for who she is, he may also be
having a traumatic hallucination, which would mean that there is a
woman but she doesn't look like his wife. This *hallucination* of a
movie is mainly anchored around this plot, providing some sort of
bearing for the viewer.
You won't see a normal moment in the entire movie, everything is topsy
turvy, every scene is either in a shattered building, or of a normal
building full of shattered people. It's a nightmarish movie, like a
dance of death. Dance is an appropriate word because the film uses
hand-held camera a lot (though Zulawski in an interview has stated that
the cameraman he found had a very steady hand, and he was obviously
proud to find him), and the shot dances around, with some circular
shots, zooms you never see coming, really it's very alive.
What really is the Zulawski strength though is directing actors, he
managed to coax scenes of incredible intensity out of Malgorzata
Braunek (as Michal's wife) and Jerzy Golinski (Michal's father). I've
seen almost nothing like it, though another Polish film springs to
mind, Jerzy Kawalerowicz's Mother Joan of the Angels. The actors handed
themselves over to Zulawski, giving them his complete trust, Braunek in
particular in one scene at the institute connected with some deep
innermost primal emotions.
The cellar shots at the institute are the bleakest shots you're likely
to see in cinema, and remind me only of paintings, and bizarrely of the
shots of test chambers in Alien 4.
The only big stumbling block for most people I believe would be the
music, which is very out-of-place jazz (three quarters of the way
between mellifluence and dissonance), and has taken me a while to get
used to.
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