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Festivals and Awards 2001
The year is difficult to characterize, and no single trend seems to
emerge. Concerns about freedom in the face of tyranny extend to the
West, with the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia ("Sky Hook," "The
Punishment"). Questions about the direction of the future lead once
again to explorations of the past and all its fictions ("Ordinary
Bolshevism," "A Trial In Prague"), and its tentacles in the
fictional present ("Brother 2"). But the ability of poets to
make living art in the face of dictatorship ("Wojaczek,"
"Abschied") and everyday life ("Otesánek") remains, as
always, the driving force of filmmaking.
Berlin and Los Angeles
The Freedom Film Festival takes place in Los Angeles at the time of the
American Film Market, and the Berlin Freedom Film Showcase takes place
at the same time as the Berlin International Film Festival. These
programs are independent initiatives that take place in cooperation and
coordination with the American Film Market (AFM) and with the Berlin
Festival. This year for the first time our presentation partner in
Berlin is the Akademie der Künste (Academy of Art). The year 2001 was our fourth year in Los Angeles and our third in Berlin.
The Berlin Freedom Film Showcase opening night, featured
Jan Svankmajer?s newest full-length film, "Otesánek." The series of film screenings
followed at the Akademie der Künste and the Czech Center. At the
gala closing night ceremony at the historic Berliner Rathaus, Poland?s legendary film director (and 2000 Honorary Oscar
recipient) Andrzej Wajda presented the second annual Andrzej
Wajda Freedom Prize to Jan Svankmajer.
In Los Angeles the opening-night film is "Sky Hook"
(Yugoslavia). A series of films by producer Peter Rommel begins at the
Monica with the ground-breaking comedy set in East-Berlin
"Nightshapes" and continues at the Goethe-Institut Los
Angeles with his documentary about early television in Europe
"TV Is King."
Summer/fall 2001
At the Moscow International Film Festival, the Karlovy Vary
International Film Festival in the Czech Republic, and the Festival East-West in Baku,
Azerbaijan, the Freedom Film Festival co-presents films in partnership with our sister festivals.
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Freedom Film Festival Poster by
Wiktor Sadowski © American
Cinema Foundation |
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THE HOLLOWAY FILE
Database of Russian and Ex-Soviet Union directors |
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FILM NOTES / DIE FILME
DEUTSCH |
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Abschied / The Farewell
Germany (2000)
About the Film
On one of the last days of an unusually hot summer, just before his
death in 1956, Bertolt Brecht is surrounded by close friends and former
lovers at his lakeside villa near the Brandenburg town of Buckow, north
of Berlin. Shortly, he will leave for the Berliner Ensemble to begin the
new season.
But right now he wants to look back on his past life, reflect on the
political upheaval stemming from Stalin's recent death, and review
his role as a dramatic force. His wife Helene Weigel is on hand, as are
his daughter Barbara Berg, his former lover Ruth Berlau, his latest
flame Kathe Reichel, and the dissident Wolfgang Harig. Over the course
of the day "from seven in the morning to five in the afternoon"
the peaceful setting erupts into a storm of raw emotions until Brecht
finds himself at the very center of the controversy. Director Jan
Schütte says "This is a fictional story, although at the same time
an authentic one. We are more interested in showing the situation of a
great writer who has encountered many difficult situations in his
private, political, and artistic lives." Ron Holloway
Director's Filmography
Jan Schütte was born in Mannheim, Germany in 1957, and studied
literature and philosophy in Tübingen, Zurich and Hamburg. He
worked as a magazine photographer and in television before making his
first film in 1992, a documentary entitled Ugge
Bärtle-Bildhauer. A member of Hamburg's Film Bureau since
1998, he has his own production company and has taught film at the
Ludwigsburg Film Academy. His films include: Da ist nirgends nichts
gewesen ausser hier (1983), Eigentlich wollte ich ja nach
amerika (1984), Dragon Chow (1987), Lost
in America (1988), Winkelmann’s Journey (1990), Nach Patagonien (1991), Bye Bye
America (1994), Voyage Into the Innermost of Vienna (1995) and Fat World (1998).
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93 min., color, 35mm
German with English subtitles
Director: Jan Schütte
Screenplay: Klaus Pohl
Dir. of photography: Edward Klosinski
Music: John Cale
Editor: Renate Merck
Producer: Gesche Carstens, Henryk Romanowski, Jan
Schutte
Production: Novoskop Film
GmbH/WDR/ORB/SWR/ARTE, and Studio Babelsberg
Independents/Arthur Hefer
Cast: Josef Bierbichler, Monica Bleibtreu, Margit Rogall,
Jeanette Hain, Samuel Fintzi, Elfriede Irrall
Contact: Wolfram Skowronnek, Cinepool/Telepool
Sonnenstrasse 21, 80331 Münich, Germany
Telephone: 49 89 55 87 60
Fax: 49 89 55 87 61 88
Email: skowronnek@telepool.de |
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Brother 2 / Brat 2
Russia (2000)
About the Film
Once the safest (police) state in Europe, today's Russia is
all too often painted as a dark citadel of crime. It was only a matter
of time before a fictional anti-hero emerged from Moscow headlines
and startled world movie audiences. Alexei Balabanov's
"Brother," (1997) a smash hit in Russia that is still
being discovered by Westerners at film festivals and on DVD, might just
be that emblematic film that starts a saga. "Brother 2"
continues the adventures of Danila Bagrov, (Sergei Bodrov, Jr.)
a deceptively innocent-looking young man, seemingly eager to please,
whose remarkable energy and ingenuity is totally devoted to wiping out
his many, many criminal enemies. The first film took him from St.
Petersburg to Moscow. Now Danila Bagrov's talents meet a new
challenge--America. Like the hero of Kubrick's "A
Clockwork Orange," you reluctantly admire Danila’s steely nerve and
physical courage even as his cheerful amorality and itchy trigger finger
chills the blood. The violence is as stylized as a Jackie Chan
film; few non-combatants stumble into the crossfire to mess up
your growing attachment to young Bagrov. Not just cold, witty
entertainment, the "Brother" films say something interesting and
true about post-Communist Russian life, just as "The
Godfather" has something to say about postwar America.
Director's Filmography
Born in 1959 in Sverdlovsk, Alexei Balabanov graduated from Gorky
University's Foreign Language department in 1981. Between 1983 and
1987 he worked as assistant director with the Sverdlov film studio. He
then graduated in 1990 from the Higher Courses of Screenwriters and
Directors in Moscow. His professional debut was as co.author of the
script for Border Conflict (1991) in collaboration with
V. Suvorov. Films:, Nastya and Yegor (1989), About
Flying in Russia (1990), Happy Days (1991)
Official Selection Cannes IFF, winner of five National Awards;
The Castle (1994), Trofilm (1995) Berlin
International Film Festival, Grand Prix in the Message to Man
International Film Festival in St. Petersburg; Brother (1997) Cannes IFF, winner Second Prize and FIPRESCI Award at
Torino IFF; Of Freaks and Men (1998), Cannes IFF, 12
National Awards.
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123 min., color, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Alexei Balabanov
Screenplay: Alexei Balabanov
Dir. of photography: Sergei Astakhov
Music: B-2, Zemphira, Chicherina, Nautilus, Saltykova,
and others
Editor: Marina Lipartia
Producer: Sergei Selyanov
Production: CTB Film Company
Cast: Sergei Bodrov, Jr., Viktor Sukhorukov, Sergei
Makovetsky, Gary Houston
Contact: Intercinema Art Agency
Druzhinnikovskaya 15
123242 Moscow, Russia
Telephone: 7 095 255 90 52
Fax: 7 095 255 90 82
Email: intercin@online.ru |
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The Little Voyage / A kis utazás
Hungary (2000)
About the Film
Eastern European films have always had a special place for the personal
history, the people's-eye, ground level view of a now
discredited past. In this breezy, sarcastic story, set in the 1970s, a
group of Hungarian teenagers win the coveted prize of a trip
"abroad"--a summer's labor at a GDR youth camp. The
supposed national characteristics of the Germans and the Hungarians
sometimes come into play, but the real comedy is provided by
incomprehension of other kinds; the usual gap between teenagers and
adults is everywhere altered by the hypocritical need to pay "lip
service" to the building of socialist character.

Director Buzás intersperses home movies taken by the reluctant
young servants of the state. There isn't much political fervor among
the kids, and there surely isn't much international solidarity among
the unruly rebels who sneak out of group singing to experience the joys
of drink, making out, and rock and roll. Like Germany's
"Sonnenallee," "The Little Voyage" captures a vanished
moment in modern history that people who grew up in any part of
Communist Europe will recognize. It is too ironic, a little too acidly
unsentimental to be called "ostalgic."
Director's Filmography
Zsebcselek aka Pocket Tricks, TV series (1996),
Leptinotarsa avagy privát nyomozati anyag a krumplibogár
titokzatos feltüneserol Magyar-országon aka
Leptinotarsa, Or Facts of a Private Investigation About The
Mysterious Appearance of Potato Beetles In Hungary,(1996) with
Jozsef Szolnoki; Magyar vándor
(anti-utifilm) aka Hungarian Pilgrim
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100 min., color, 35mm
Hungarian with English subtitles
Director: Mihály Buzás
Screenplay: Mihály Buzás, Zoltan Korosi, Gyorgy
Palos
Dir. of photography: Gyorgy Palos
Music: Zoltan Vegso
Editor: Mihály Buzás
Producer: Gyorgy Czaban, Mihály Buzás
Production: Zsebcselek Csoport in association with MMK,
ORTT, MAFSZ
Cast: Jozsef Gyabronka, Arnold Farkas, Jozsef Szikra, Imola
Gaspar, Nora Cseszarik, Erzsebet Dozsa
Contact: Katalin Vajda, Magyar Filmunio
Varosligeti Fasor 38
1068 Budapest, Hungary
Telephone: 361 351 7760
Fax: 361 352 6734
Email: elender@filmunio.hu
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Night Shapes / Nachtgestalten
Germany (1999)
About the Film
Tonight, the Pope is flying into Berlin, former front-line city of
the cold war. Despite all of the earth-shaking change that has
happened all around them, Berlin's night people still have to seek
their own salvation and their own happiness, one person at a time.
"Night Shapes" is a cluster of stories from that single night,
weaving together three main encounters and several smaller ones.
For a homeless couple, the unexpected gift of 100 marks means a jealous
fight and a Cinderella night in a cheap, but clean, hotel. A farmer
from the sticks learns a lesson in life when he defends a
drug-addicted prostitute. A middle-aged businessman wrongfully
accuses an Angolan immigrant child of theft, and ends up responsible for
the boy throughout the long and unpredictable night. "Night
Shapes," for all of its sentimental grace, is at heart a bitter,
hard-edged comedy about being down and out. It continues the Berlin
Noir series we began at the Freedom Film Festival last year with
"Wege in die Nacht."
Director's Filmography
Andreas Dresen was born in Gera in 1963. Made his first amateur films as
a boy. After graduating in 1982 he worked as a sound engineer at the
theater in Schwerin. In 1985/86 he was a trainee in the DEFA feature
film studio. From 1986 to 1991 he studied directing at the Konrad Wolf
film school in Babelsberg. In 1996 he staged Goethe's
"Urfaust" at the State Theater in Cottbus. He became a member
of the German Academy of Arts in 1998. Presently lives in Potsdam.
Selected filmography: Der kleine Clown (1985)short film; Schritte des anderen (1986) short film;Zug in die
Ferne (1989) short film, State of Hessen film prize; So
schnell es geht nach Istanbul (1990) short film; Stilles
Land (1992) German critics’ prize; Krauses Kneipe (1993) documentary; Kuckuckskinder (1994)
documentary; Mein unbekannter Ehemann (1995) TV film,
jury prize Max Ophüls Festival, Saarbrücken; Das andere
Leben des Herrn Kreins (1995) TV film, DAG TV gold prize; Polizieiruf 110Der Tausch (1996) TV film; Raus
aus der Haut (1997) TV film.

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104 min., color, 35mm
German with English subtitles
Director: Andreas Dresen
Screenplay: Andreas Dresen
Dir. of photography: Andreas Höfer
Editor: Monika Schindler
Producer: Peter Rommel
Production: Rommel Film
Commissioning Editors: Conny (Cooky) Ziesche
(ORB),
Georg Steinert (Arte),Wolfgang Voigt (MDR), Ann
Schäfer (SFB)
With support from: Filmboard Berlin-Brandenburg GmbH,
Studio Babelsberg Independents, Bundesministerium des Innern, Kulturelle
Filmförderung Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Cast: Myriam Abbas, Dominique Horwitz, Oliver
Bäßler,
Susanne Bormann, Michael Gwisdek, Ricardo Valentim
Ade Sapara, Imogen Kogge
Contact: Claudia Rudolph, Bavaria Film GmbH
Bavariafilmplatz 7,
D-82031 Geiselgasteig, Germany
Telephone: 49 89 6499 3728
Fax: 49 89 0499 3720
Email: Claudia.Rudolph@bavaria-film.de |
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Ordinary Bolshevism / Obyknovenny Bolshevism
Russia (1999)
About the Film
"Ordinary Fascism" is the title of a once-famous Communist
documentary about elements of the Nazi past that survived the war.
"Ordinary Bolshevism" has positioned itself as its
present-day moral and historical equivalent. It's a
fast-paced, scathing review of the history of the USSR, told with
attitude and indignation. The director, Yevgeny Tsymbal, deftly uses
archival footage that visually backs his claim that Russia before the
Bolshevik revolution was already a nation on its way up, an emerging
success story that might have made a very different contribution to
twentieth-century history. The film's most controversial
section compares newsreels of the rise of Lenin in 1917 to German
footage of workers ten or so years later, as that country was on the
brink of falling for another charismatic European dictator.
"Ordinary Bolshevism" has the populist feel and the energy of
the best-remembered U.S. World War II documentaries, especially
Frank Capra's "Why We Fight" film series.
Director's Filmography
Yevgeny Tsymbal was born in 1949. He graduated in history from Rostov
University, and in 1984 from the Higher Courses of Directors in Moscow
(VKSR) where he studied under Eldar Ryazanov. He briefly
attended the Sundance Institute's screenwriter's workshop, and
the Nordisk Folk High School in Sweden, where he also taught. As an
original director of Mosfilm he made one of the first films dealing with
Stalinist repression, Advocate Barrister Sedov (1988)
which won the Special Award and FIPRESCI Prize at Mannheim, as well as
receiving awards in Los Angeles and from the British Academy for Film
and Television Arts. In 1990 he made Unextinguished Moon revealing obscure behind-the-scenes Stalinist intrigues. He
directed second-unit photography for Nikita Mikhalkov's The
Barber of Siberia.
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76 min., black and white, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Yevgeny Tsymbal
Screenplay: Eduard Volodarsky, Vladimir Zheleznikov
Dir. of photography:
Editor: Irina Golynkina
Producer: Oleg Solodovnikov
Production: The Community of Sons and Daughters of the
Motherland, with the participation of GLOBUS
Contact: Intercinema Art Agency
Druzhinnikovskaya 15
123242 Moscow, Russia
Telephone: 7 095 255 90 52
Fax: 7 095 255 90 82
Email: intercin@online.ru |
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The Punishment
Austria (1999)
About the Film
"The Punishment" is a documentary that explores the same moral
issues that the fictional "Sky Hook" does. Director Goran Rebic
interviews residents of Belgrade after the 1999 war. His subjects
include elementary school students, members of the professional class,
and a former film star (Sonja Savic). Though we've seen
television news footage of the effects of the bombing, Rebic also adds
the eye of a filmmaker, observing Belgrade's shattered glass and
angry graffiti. Unlike many works of advocacy, "The Punishment,"
for all its conviction, is balanced by an honest appreciation of the
dilemma faced by people of good will who, dealing with an intractable
and evil government, feel that they have no option but to use war plans
that put civilian populations at risk. You may well feel that it is
still worth the cost; but Goran Rebic wants to make sure that you
really know the full cost. For many others, "The Punishment"
will remain as a valuable snapshot of a way of conducting history that
we must try to avoid repeating.
Director's Filmography
Goran Rebic was born in Vojvodina, Yugoslavia in 1968. He has been a
resident of Vienna since the age of one. He made his fiction debut with
1997's Jugofilm. The award-winning film centered around a
Vienna family of Yugoslavian immigrants struggling with the echoes and
ramifications of the raging war in their mother country. After the1990
short Domovina, a mix of enacted and documentary elements,
Rebic's first full-length works were the acclaimed documentaries
During The Many Years (1991) and On The Edge Of The
World (1992). Both films dealt with subject matter that
Rebic would continue to explore in both Jugofilm and The
Punishment. In On The Edge Of The World, Rebic studied the
effects of war in the Georgian Republic, focusing on the loss of hope
and home, as well as the transition from socialism to nationalism. Rebic
is currently preparing his second fiction feature. Tentatively titled
Danube, the film is set to be an intercultural offering against
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91 min., color, 35mm
Serbo.Croatian with English subtitles
Director: Goran Rebic
Screenplay: Goran Rebic
Dir. of photography: Jerzy Palacz
Music: Grekow.Cholowicz, Partibrejkers, Vlado Divljan &
Idoli, and vocal harmonies by Tobias Cambensy, Richard Reiter, Jan
Leibnitz and Michael Jankowitsch
Editor: Martin Matusiak
Producer: Franz Novotny, A Novotny & Novotny
Filmproduktion
Production: (in Yugoslavia) Ljubisa Samardzic,
Cinema Design
Co-Production: ÖFI/Österreichisches
Filminstitut and ORF/Film und Fernseh-Abkommen
Cast: Zivota Neimarevic, Dragan Jovanovic, Nebojsa
Glogovac, Biljana Srbljanovic, Sonja Savic
Contact: Anne Laurent, Austrian Film Commission
Stiftgasse 6,
1070 Wien, Austria
Telephone: 43 1 526 33 23 200
Fax: 43 1 526 6801
Email: festivals@afc.at
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Sky Hook / Nebeska Udica
Yugoslavia/Italy (1999)
About the Film
Belgrade, less than two years ago. For the first time in more than 50
years, a major European city is under intense and regular air
bombardment. We are confronted with the now-familiar, but still
discomfiting images of modern people, who dress and look like us,
dashing fearfully into underground shelters to escape Western bombers.
Like Spike Lee's "Do The Right Thing," the subject of
"Sky Hook" is a city block under the pressures of endless summer
heat and the fear of sudden violence. A former athlete goads his pals,
unemployed by sanctions and war, into clearing a basketball court out of
the rubble of a shattered factory. Slowly, the collective effort of
maintaining the court and playing the roughest of street basketball
restores a degree of normality to their lives.
Underneath the canopy of bombing, it's the universal story of a
tough, colorful and desperate urban neighborhood, of a loosely connected
gang of friends, lovers, and rivals who sometimes collide and sometimes
pull together, a clear metaphor for the way that director Ljubisa
Samardzic saw Serbian national life during one dramatic moment at the
end of the century. "Sky Hook" avoids explicit political
statements and stays with the human drama of families and friends
unwilling or unable to leave the Yugoslav capital. It doesn't
challenge your opinions of that doomed government, but it directly
engages your conscience about war.
Director's Filmography
Ljubisa Samardzic was born in 1936 in Skopje and studied at the Belgrade
Drama Academy. He has long been one of Yugoslavia's most popular
movie stars, having appeared in more than 150 films. Winner of six
Yugoslavian Film Festival awards for acting, he also received the Best
Actor award at the 1967 Venice Film Festival for his performance in
"The Morning." After the collapse of the unified Yugoslav
state, he founded the production company Cinema Design
(Belgrade), which he owns and operates with his son, Dragan.
They produced the dark comedy "Wheels," which screened at the
2000 Freedom Film Festival. Sky Hook is his directing debut.
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95 min., color, 35mm
Serbian with English subtitles
Director: Ljubisa Samardzic
Screenplay: Djordje Milosavljevic, Srdjan Koljevic
Dir. of photography: Radoslav Vladic
Music: Vlatko Stefanovski
Editor: Marko Glusac
Producer: Ljubisa Samardzic
Co-Producer: Giacomo Billi
Production: Cinema Design
Co-Production:Radio-Televizija Srbije (Belgrade),
Cine Enterprise, Viareggio (Italy)
Cast: Nebojsa Glogovac, Ana Sofrenovic, Ivan Jevtovic,
Katarina Zutic, Nikola Kojo, Sonja Kolacaric, Dragan Bjelogrlic
Contact: Ljubisa Samardzic, Cinema Design
Ustanicka 125/1,
11000 Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Telephone: 381 11 488 8011
Fax: 381 11 488 2377
Email: sinema@EUnet.yu |
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A Trial in Prague / Prazky Proces
Czech Republic/USA (1999)
About the Film
It's 1952. The war has been over for only seven years, but already
Europe fears the outbreak of World War III. The world's press is
focused on a glittering propaganda event in Czechoslovakia. The
notorious Slansky show trials purport to uncover a pro-Western spy
ring at the center of Prague's Communist government. Fourteen state
and party officials stood accused of high treason. Although they were
innocent of the charges, they confessed and were convicted. Eleven of
the fourteen were Jews. "A Trial in Prague" is a new
documentary that draws together archival footage of the trial,
present-day personal testimony, and secret state documents that have
only come to light after the collapse of the Iron Curtain. How can so
many people be made to confess to imaginary crimes? How many other
people knew, or should have known, that the trials were a sham?
Who, in the West, cared enough to speak out? Who didn't?
And who actively supported the tormentors? Director Zuzana Justman
balances compassion for the trial's very human victims with a wider
concern for the way a whole society can be coerced into obedience.
Director's Filmography
Zuzana Justman was born in Czechoslovakia but now lives in the United
States. A graduate of Vassar College and Columbia University in Russian
and Slavic studies, she worked as writer and translator before making
her filmmaking debut in 1989 as producer and screenwriter of Terezin
Diary, a documentary about the World War II concentration camp in
Czechoslovakia where she was incarcerated for two years. In 1993 she
wrote, produced and directed Czech Women: Now We Are Free and she
received an Emmy award in 1999 for Voices of the Children, a
documentary about three concentration camp survivors.
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82 min., color & black and white, 35mm
English, Czech and French with English subtitles
Director: Zuzana Justman
Screenplay: Zuzana Justman
Dir. of photography: Miro Gabor, Marek Jicha
Music: Peter Fish
Editor: David Charap
Producer: Zuzana Justman, Jiri Jezek, Zuzana Cervenkova,
David Charap
Production: Pick Productions, Space Films
Contact: The Cinema Guild
130 Madison Avenue, 2nd floor
New York, NY 10016 USA
Telephone: 212 685-6242
Fax: 212 685-4717
E-mail: Thecinemag@aol.com |
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Wojaczek
Poland (1999)
About the Film
"Rafal Wojaczek was a rebellious poet, who died prematurely, like
Jean-Michel Basquiat or Jim Morrison. He died in 1971 at the age of
26. Fueled by his self-destructive life, his poetry made a great
impression on generations of Poles. He drank and fought and walked
through windows. Constantly attempting suicide, he unsuccessfully hanged
himself and jumped from the third floor. Confronting death on a daily
basis, he tried to tame it. Loved by women, he cared for no one, not
even himself, living desperado-style only for poetry. Conscious of
the need for myth in the mythless reality of communist Poland, he burned
his life as an offering"Lech Majewski.
Director's Filmography
Lech Majewski was born in 1953 in Katowice, Poland and graduated in 1977
from Lodz Film School. After making two features in Poland, An
Annunciation (1978) and The Knight (1980), he
emigrated to the United States in 1981. His first American film was Flight of the Spruce Goose (1985). In 1989 he directed Prisoner of Rio, about one of the Great Train Robbery
perpetrators, Ronald Biggs, with whom he wrote the script. Gospel
According to Harry (1992) takes place in California and
stars Viggo Mortensen and Rita Tushingham. In 1996 he wrote, and
co-produced, Basquiat which was eventually directed by Julian
Schnabel, before returning to Poland to film his own The Roe's
Room (1997) an autobiographical opera. Mr. Majewski is also
a noted poet, novelist, set designer, and director of opera and
performance art (including Penderecki's "Ubu Rex" and
Robert Wilson/Tom Waits/William Burroughs' "The Black
Rider") and producer of CDs of modern Polish music.
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90 min., black and white 35mm
Polish with English subtitles
Director: Lech Majewski
Screenplay: Lech Majewski, Maciej Melecki
Dir. of photography: Adam Sikora
Editor: Elliot Ems
Producer: Henryk Romanowski
Production: Filmcontract in association with TVP, Agencja
Produkcji Filmowej Komitetu Kinematografii
Cast: Krzysztof Siwczyk, Dominika Ostalowska, Elzbieta
Okupsda, Andrzej Mastalerz
Contact: Urszula Suszko, film promotion coordinator,
Film contract,
Chelmska 21,
00 724 Warszawa, Poland
Telephone: 48 22 841 65 78
Fax: 48 22 841 65 91
Email: filmcont@pol.pl |
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