Three masterpieces from one of Poland's most prominent filmmaker: Jak daleko stad, jak blisko (How Far, How Near ), Dolina Issy (Issa Valley), Lawa (Lava - A Tale of Adam Mickiewicz's 'Forefathers' Eve).
The Masterpieces of Polish Cinema
Tadeusz Konwicki
Studio: SPI International
Number of disks: 3
Condition: Brand New, Sealed, Mint
Total time: 427 minutes
Language version: Polish
Subtitles: unknown
Region: 0 (PAL). European or multi-system DVD player is required to see this DVD.
Content:
DVD 1
Jak daleko stad, jak blisko (How Far, How Near ), 1972
Plot: Andrew is the hero of this dream-like movie, takes a symbolic journey to the past hoping to find the reasons behind the suicide of his friend Max. During his journey he revisit ghost of his past: his first love, his parents, first wife and childhood friends.
Cast: Andrzej Lapicki, Gustaw Holoubek, Maja Komorowska, Anna Dymna
DVD 2
Dolina Issy (Issa Valley), 1982
Plot: Based on the novel by Nobel prize winner Czeslaw Milosz, the film evokes a childhood in rural Lithuania between the wars. A country boy, Tomaszek, lives on a rich estate, situated on the Polish border. He realizes that the Issa Valley he lives in is to be torn apart by internal political conflicts and unrests among the mixed population of Poles, Lithuanians, Jews and Russians. He, however, is captivated by a paradise surrounding him, the forest, and his fantasies.
Cast: Anna Dymna, Danuta Szaflarska, Ewa Wisniewska, Edward Dziewonski
DVD 3
Lawa (Lava - A Tale of Adam Mickiewicz's 'Forefathers' Eve), 1989
Plot: The film is based on 19th century poetic drama by Poland's national poet Adam Mickiewicz, depicts Poland under the Russian rule during the nineteenth century. Konwicki's movie was produced during the final months of communist rule of Poland.
Cast: Gustaw Holoubek, Maja Komorowska, Piotr Fronczewski, Tadeusz Lomnicki
About the director:
This author of twenty novels, film director and screenwriter (the founder of the "Polish cinema des auteurs") was born in Lithuania in 1926.
Konwicki is the conscience of Polish society and the crazed mirror in which it is reflected. He is one of the writers who have left the most lasting impression on post-war Polish literature and culture. He is regarded as a spokesman for the yearnings, attitudes, hopes and rage of several generations.
From the BESIEGED CITY (1956) inaugurates a Vilnius cycle that would include the novels A HOLE IN THE SKY (1959), THE ANTHROPOS-SPECTRE-BEAST (1969), A CHRONICLE OF AMOROUS INCIDENTS (1974) and BOHIN (1987). These works, among Konwicki's most beautiful, evoke the region around Vilnius as a land of growing up and of initiation into the sense of life, of learning about love and death, a land where feelings are born and where the reconciliation with existence - a Faustian acceptance of duration - occurs. The portrait of contemporaneity, a sterile region and acid-etched time, is most intense in the cycle of novels that includes A DREAM BOOK FOR OUR TIME (1963), ASCENSION INTO HEAVEN (1967), and NOTHING OR NOTHING (1971). They share an analysis of social memory that contains the evil of wartime and Stalinist evil, as well as the construction of a protagonist who is first unable to accept his own identity because it contains elements of guilt, and then is unable to establish that identity because the way to it is blocked by the lack of a connection between his own person and the present moment around him. That present moment is a vision of a police state in which the population, under constant surveillance, slowly loses its own contours and collapses into a shapeless mass. This image is deepened in the next cycle, which includes the best-known works of literature to be published outside the purview of state censorship: THE POLISH COMPLEX (1977), A MINOR APOCALYPSE (1979) and UNDERGROUND RIVER, UNDERGROUND BIRDS (1984).
Konwicki's direct engagement in social issues grew steadily after the publication of NOTHING OR NOTHING. This engagement was counter-balanced by a cycle of "lying journals". These constituted non-required writing and were engaged neither in politics nor in literature. They cannot be read either as fiction or as fact, and are diverse in terms of their genres and aesthetics. These works - THE CALENDAR AND THE OBITUARY (1976), RISING AND SETTING OF THE MOON (1982), NOWY SWIAT STREET AND VICINITY (1986), NORTHERN LIGHTS (1991) and SLANDER AGAINST MYSELF (1995) are collections of journal entries and essayistic interludes, fragments of literary works and social indiscretions. Their freedom, charm, wide range of wit and humors make them, like Gombrowicz's DIARIES, true literary pearls and frequent objects of imitation.
"(...) I write above all for the reader, with the intention of giving pleasure, amusing, stunning or destroying. It is impossible to write without the other person." ("Half a Century of Purgation")
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