Krzysztof Kieslowski (1941-1996)

Krzysztof Kieslowski was born in Warsaw on June 27, 1941. Probably the best known Polish Film Director of the last two decades, Kieslowski began by making documentaries.(His first film was a short documentary for television, THE TRAM(1966), directed while still at the Lodz State Theatrical and Film College.) These films concentrated on aspects of Polish life, culture, and political conditions under the then Communist Party. Indeed it was these conditions which helped spark the Solidarity movement which ultimately forced the Party to relinquish power by way of new general elections.

Starting with short black and white 16mm documentaries, Kieslowski began to develop a style that would become characteristic of his work. Emphasis on seemingly insignificant moments such as feet walking, or background characters helped to bring a natural clarity to his cinematography. The audience becomes a genuine third party, observing the natural flow of the subjects within his field of vision imposed by the camera. Realism was what Kieslowski concentrated on, and indeed his films, especially the features, have a documentary feel to them.

Earlier films reflected a social commentary on Polish martial law and the way in which ordinary people maintained their lives inside a restrictive social environment. His award-winning 1979 feature, CAMERA BUFF, a slyly humorous, satirical look at life in a corrupt provincial factory, may have had personal dimensions for Kieslowski as it depicts a filmmaker who exposes himself to both attention and criticism when he progresses from home movies to committed social documentaries. (It featured a cameo by Zanussi playing himself.)

Kieslowski learned firsthand that censorship may ride on the coattails of exposure with BLIND CHANCE (1981), which considered three possibilities for Poland's political future as it explored three different outcomes springing from the premise of a student trying to catch a train. BLIND CHANCE was unable to include a fourth story in which Poland throws out the Communist Party entirely, and the remaining film, still quite impressive, was banned for over five years before finally being released in 1987. While the outcome of one BLIND CHANCE story was a blithely apolitical world (the student misses the train, and instead meets a sexy woman with whom he becomes involved), Kieslowski's subsequent NO END (1984), while not forsaking wit entirely, nonetheless refused to be glibly satirical. The film's hero, a lawyer who represented many Poles oppressed by martial law, is dead at the film's opening.

Like Zanussi's work, Kieslowski's films always featured philosophical journeys into the human spirit and a concern for the moral and ethical implications of human action. Fittingly, he confirmed his status as a major contemporary director with DECALOGUE (1988), an ambitious series of ten hour-long films funded by Polish TV, telling stories "based" on the Ten Commandments. (In DECALOGUE 10, for instance, two brothers, an accountant and a punk rocker, both covet the stamp collection they have inherited from their father.) In the same year, Kieslowski expanded segments five and six into two features, A SHORT FILM ABOUT KILLING and A SHORT FILM ABOUT LOVE. Partially set, like the rest of the series, on a Warsaw housing estate, A SHORT FILM ABOUT KILLING is a grim and powerful tale drawing formal parallels between the act of murder and the workings of the criminal justice system.

His first major international film, THE DOUBLE LIFE OF VERONIQUE (1991) explored human emotion in a very delicate often ironic way. Indeed as he put it, "...a sensitive film for sensitive people..." "Veronique" explores the simultaneous lives of two women, one Polish and the other French who are each other's double, and who both feel a strange link to each other's lives.

His magnum opus and fittingly enough, his last film project was a trilogy series entitled Three Colours: BLUE (1993), RED (1994) and WHITE (1994). Based on the three colours of the French Revolution, each film examines one thread of each theme. BLUE examines freedom, as portrayed by a woman who loses her family in an automobile accident, and the way in which she discovers a new direction to her life. WHITE looks at one man's struggle for equality in his marriage in an aura of black humour, and finally RED concentrates on fraternity by highlighting the development of a relationship between a young model and an elderly man.

Sadly in March 1996 Kieslowski died due to heart compilcations in a Warsaw hospital, but not before announcing tentative plans for another trilogy rumoured to be based upon the concepts of HEAVEN, HELL and PURGATORY.

     FILMOGRAPHY 

1966 The Tram

1969 From the City of Lodz

1975 Personnel(Personel)

1976 The Scar(Blizna)

1976 The Calm(Spokoj)

1979 Camera Buff(Amator)

1981 Short Working Day(Krotki Dzien Pracy)

1981 Blind Chance(Przypadek)

1984 No End(Bez konca)

1988 Thou Shalt Not Take the Name of the Lord They God in Vain/Dekalog 2

1988 Thou Shalt Not Steal/Dekalog 7

1988 Thou Shalt Not Covet Thy Neighbor's Wife/Dekalog 9

1988 Thou Shalt not Covet Thy Neighbor's Goods/Dekalog 10

1988 Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness/Dekalog 8

1988 A Short Film About Killing(Krotki film o milosci)/Dekalog 5/Thou Shalt Not Kill

1988 A Short Film About Love(Krotki film o zabijaniu)/Dekalog 6/ Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery

1988 I Am the Lord Thy God/Dekalog1

1988 Honor Thy Father and Thy Mother/Dekalog 4

1988 Honor the Sabbath Day/Dekalog 3

1990 City Life

1991 The Double Life of Veronique(La Double Vie de Veronique)

1992 Our Hollywood Education

1993 Blue(Bleu)

1994 White(Blanc)

1994 Red(Rouge)
 
 


I spent the Christmas holidays in Warsaw in 1993. The weather was rotten. Despite that, the booksellers had put up their stalls. On one of them I noticed a little collection of poems by Wislawa Szymborska (*). She is Roman Gren's favorite poet, he is the translator interpreter for "Three Colours". I bought the book for him as a present. We had never met, Wislawa Szymborska and I. I don't ever know if we have friends in common. It was while I was flipping through this book that I found, on page 26 the poem "Love at First Sight", which expresses an idea very close to that of the film "Red".
So I decided to keep the book for myself.
 
Krzysztof Kieslowski

Love at First Sight
by Wislawa Szymborska

They both thought
that a sudden feeling had united them
This certainty is beautiful,
Even more beautiful than uncertainty.
They thought they didn't know each other,
nothing had ever happened between them,
These streets, these stairs, this corridors,
Where they could have met so long ago?
I would like to ask them,
if they can remember -
perhaps in a revolving door
face to face one day?
A "sorry" in the crowd?
"Wrong number" on the 'phone?
- but I know the answer.
No, they don't remember.
How surprised they would be
For such a long time already
Fate has been playing with them.
Not quite yet ready
to change into destiny,
which brings them nearer and yet further,
cutting their path
and stifling a laugh,
escaping ever further;
There were sings, indications,
undecipherable, what does in matter.
Three years ago, perhaps
or even last Tuesday,
this leaf flying
from one shoulder to another?
Something lost and gathered.
Who knows, perhaps a ball already
in the bushes, in childhood?
There were handles, door bells,
where, on the trace of a hand,
another hand was placed;
suitcases next to one another in the
left luggage.
And maybe one night the same dream
forgotten on walking;
But every badging
is only a continuation
and the book of fate is
always open in the middle.

Translation from Polish by Roman Gren
Translation from French by Sarah Hardenberg
 
 

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