Showing posts with label Andrzej Wajda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrzej Wajda. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

44) Without Anesthesia (1978) and 45) Camouflage (1977)

45) Without Anesthesia (1978) Dir: Andrzej Wajda Date Released: February 1982 Date Seen: February 8, 2010 Rating: 3.75/5

46) Camouflage (1977) Dir: Krzystof Zanussi Date Released: August 1981 Date Seen: February 8, 2010 Rating: 3.75/5

Both are effective in achieving emotional resonance despite being both rather stunted in their despairing POV. See my article for the New York Press.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

265) Ashes and Diamonds (1958) and 266) Samson (1961)



265) Ashes and Diamonds (1958) Dir: Andrzej Wajda Date Released: May 1961 Date Seen: August 23, 2009 Rating: 3.25/5

266) Samson (1961) Dir: Andrzej Wajda Date Released (DVD): December 2004 Date Seen: August 23, 2009 Rating: 3.5/5

The amount of agency that the tortured protagonists of Ashes and Diamonds and Samson have by the end of either film delineates how they differ as martyrs. Ashes and Diamonds' Maciek (Zbigniew Cybulski) is doomed by the knowledge that his actions on behalf of the anti-Communist resistance are futile and hence cannot advance beyond his current stasis. Conversely, though Samson's Jakub (Serge Merlin) is wracked with guilt over his selfish need to distance himself from the ghetto he's escaped from, he simply has forgotten that he can make something of his freedom thanks to the opportunities the resistance supplies him with. Maciek's life, to use Wajda's recurring metaphor, is an permanently unbalanced house of cards while Jakub's has a sturdier foundation. 

This essential difference is paradoxical considering that, while both films were made more than a decade after WW2, Jakub's story takes place at the inception of the war and Maciek's just after armistice has been declared. Samson is a more involving story because its wracked hero has a shriveled but vital air of hope about him and yet, Jakub's final act of defiance is a hollow victory. It can only be re-imagined as an act of purely symbolic rebellion thanks to the grace of perspective. Jakub's story appears to be more pressing than Maciek's, but that sense of urgency is false. The miasma of indecision that Maciek sinks in is ironically more appropriate as it directly reflects the moral stagnation Wajda's filmmaking is responding to. It may be more monotonous than Samson, but it is intellectually more earnest.