282-285 Andrzej Wajda: Three War Films
-
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:27 pm
- Location: London, UK
282-285 Andrzej Wajda: Three War Films
Andrzej Wajda: Three War Films
In 1999, Polish director Andrzej Wajda received an Honorary Academy Award for his body of work: more than thirty-five feature films, beginning with A Generation in 1955. Wajda's next film, Kanal, the first ever made about the Warsaw Uprising, won the Special Jury Prize at Cannes and launched Wajda on the path to international renown, a status secured with the release of his masterpiece, Ashes and Diamonds, in 1958. These three groundbreaking films helped usher in the Polish School movement and have often been regarded as a trilogy. But each boldly stands on its own—a testament to the resilience of the human spirit and the struggle for personal and national freedom. The Criterion Collection is proud to present this director-approved edition, with new transfers of all three films and extensive interviews with the filmmaker and his colleagues.
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
A Generation
Stach is a wayward teen living in squalor on the outskirts of Nazi-occupied Warsaw. Guided by an avuncular Communist organizer, he is introduced to the underground resistance—and to the beautiful Dorota. Soon he is engaged in dangerous efforts to fight oppression and indignity, maturing as he assumes responsibility for others' lives. A coming-of-age story of survival and shattering loss, A Generation delivers a brutal portrait of the human cost of war.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• New, restored high-definition digital transfer
• Andrzej Wajda: On Becoming a Filmmaker, an exclusive interview with the director and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Ceramics from Ilza (Ceramika iłżecka), Wajda's 1951 film school short
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, posters, and original artwork by the director
• New and improved English subtitle translation
• Plus: A new essay by film scholar Ewa Mazierska
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Kanal
"Watch them closely, for these are the last hours of their lives," announces a narrator, foretelling the tragedy that unfolds as a war-ravaged company of Home Army resistance fighters tries to escape the Nazi onslaught through the sewers of Warsaw. Determined to survive, the men and women slog through the hellish labyrinth, piercing the darkness with the strength of their individual spirits. Based on true events, Kanal was the first film ever made about the Warsaw Uprising and brought director Andrzej Wajda to the attention of international audiences, earning the Special Jury Prize in Cannes in 1957.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• New, restored high-definition digital transfer
• Andrzej Wajda: On Kanal, a 27-minute exclusive new interview with the director, assistant director Janusz Morgenstern, and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Jan Nowak-Jezioranski: Courier from Warsaw, a new 28-minute interview by Wajda of a Warsaw Uprising insider
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, and posters
• New and improved English subtitle translation
• PLUS: A new essay by film critic John Simon
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Ashes and Diamonds
A milestone of Polish cinema, this electrifying international sensation by Andrzej Wajda—the final film in his celebrated war trilogy—entwines the story of one man's moral crisis with the fate of a nation. In a small Polish town on the final day of World War II, Maciek (the coolly charismatic Zbigniew Cybulski), a fighter in the underground anti-Communist resistance movement, has orders to assassinate an incoming commissar. But when he meets and falls for a young barmaid (Ewa Krzyzewska), he begins to question his commitment to a cause that requires him to risk his life. Ashes and Diamonds' lustrous monochrome cinematography—wreathed in shadows, smoke, and fog—and spectacularly choreographed set pieces lend a breathtaking visual dynamism to this urgent, incendiary vision of a country at a crossroads in its struggle for self-determination.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• On the Blu-ray: New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
• On the DVD: restored high-definition digital transfer
• Audio commentary from 2004 featuring film scholar Annette Insdorf
• New video essay by Insdorf on the film's legacy (Blu-ray only)
• Andrzej Wajda: On "Ashes and Diamonds," a 2005 program featuring director Andrzej Wajda, second director Janusz Morgenstern, and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Archival newsreel footage on the making of the film
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, and posters (DVD only)
• New English subtitle translation
• PLUS: An essay by film scholar Paul Coates
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
In 1999, Polish director Andrzej Wajda received an Honorary Academy Award for his body of work: more than thirty-five feature films, beginning with A Generation in 1955. Wajda's next film, Kanal, the first ever made about the Warsaw Uprising, won the Special Jury Prize at Cannes and launched Wajda on the path to international renown, a status secured with the release of his masterpiece, Ashes and Diamonds, in 1958. These three groundbreaking films helped usher in the Polish School movement and have often been regarded as a trilogy. But each boldly stands on its own—a testament to the resilience of the human spirit and the struggle for personal and national freedom. The Criterion Collection is proud to present this director-approved edition, with new transfers of all three films and extensive interviews with the filmmaker and his colleagues.
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
A Generation
Stach is a wayward teen living in squalor on the outskirts of Nazi-occupied Warsaw. Guided by an avuncular Communist organizer, he is introduced to the underground resistance—and to the beautiful Dorota. Soon he is engaged in dangerous efforts to fight oppression and indignity, maturing as he assumes responsibility for others' lives. A coming-of-age story of survival and shattering loss, A Generation delivers a brutal portrait of the human cost of war.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• New, restored high-definition digital transfer
• Andrzej Wajda: On Becoming a Filmmaker, an exclusive interview with the director and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Ceramics from Ilza (Ceramika iłżecka), Wajda's 1951 film school short
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, posters, and original artwork by the director
• New and improved English subtitle translation
• Plus: A new essay by film scholar Ewa Mazierska
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Kanal
"Watch them closely, for these are the last hours of their lives," announces a narrator, foretelling the tragedy that unfolds as a war-ravaged company of Home Army resistance fighters tries to escape the Nazi onslaught through the sewers of Warsaw. Determined to survive, the men and women slog through the hellish labyrinth, piercing the darkness with the strength of their individual spirits. Based on true events, Kanal was the first film ever made about the Warsaw Uprising and brought director Andrzej Wajda to the attention of international audiences, earning the Special Jury Prize in Cannes in 1957.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• New, restored high-definition digital transfer
• Andrzej Wajda: On Kanal, a 27-minute exclusive new interview with the director, assistant director Janusz Morgenstern, and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Jan Nowak-Jezioranski: Courier from Warsaw, a new 28-minute interview by Wajda of a Warsaw Uprising insider
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, and posters
• New and improved English subtitle translation
• PLUS: A new essay by film critic John Simon
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Ashes and Diamonds
A milestone of Polish cinema, this electrifying international sensation by Andrzej Wajda—the final film in his celebrated war trilogy—entwines the story of one man's moral crisis with the fate of a nation. In a small Polish town on the final day of World War II, Maciek (the coolly charismatic Zbigniew Cybulski), a fighter in the underground anti-Communist resistance movement, has orders to assassinate an incoming commissar. But when he meets and falls for a young barmaid (Ewa Krzyzewska), he begins to question his commitment to a cause that requires him to risk his life. Ashes and Diamonds' lustrous monochrome cinematography—wreathed in shadows, smoke, and fog—and spectacularly choreographed set pieces lend a breathtaking visual dynamism to this urgent, incendiary vision of a country at a crossroads in its struggle for self-determination.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• On the Blu-ray: New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
• On the DVD: restored high-definition digital transfer
• Audio commentary from 2004 featuring film scholar Annette Insdorf
• New video essay by Insdorf on the film's legacy (Blu-ray only)
• Andrzej Wajda: On "Ashes and Diamonds," a 2005 program featuring director Andrzej Wajda, second director Janusz Morgenstern, and film critic Jerzy Plazewski
• Archival newsreel footage on the making of the film
• Rare behind-the-scenes production photos, publicity stills, and posters (DVD only)
• New English subtitle translation
• PLUS: An essay by film scholar Paul Coates
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Last edited by Narshty on Wed Dec 22, 2004 5:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:45 pm
- Location: Washington
- Contact:
- What A Disgrace
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 10:34 pm
- Contact:
- The Elegant Dandy Fop
- Joined: Thu Dec 09, 2004 3:25 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
- godardslave
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:44 pm
- Location: Confusing and open ended = high art.
i think he means in terms of money it will cost.The Elegant Dandy Fop wrote:You say it as though it's a bad thing.cdnchris wrote:Christ!!! They're releasing WAY too much each month now.
lol...is this a question you're asking or a statement you're making?hektor wrote:If this continues at this rate I will not be able to continue to purchase everything they issue?
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:45 pm
- Location: Washington
- Contact:
- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
- Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK
I remember seeing Ashes and Diamonds years ago and being very impressed, so I'm looking forward to seeing it again and the earlier films too - here is an article from the February 1998 issue (page 59) of Sight and Sound on the trilogy that related to a Eureka video release:
Geoffrey Macnab admires Wajda's classic trilogy
There was a time when Andrez Wajda was easily the best-known Polish film-maker in the west. One of the giants of post-war East European cinema, he exercised an enormous influence on young film-makers from Polanski and Kieslowski in Poland to Lindsay Anderson in the UK. The stark black-and-white imagery of wartime Warsaw in Spielberg's Schindler's List bears his imprint (it is no surprise that the production designer on that film was Allan Starski, one of Wajda's proteges).
Nowadays, though, Wajda seems a marginal, anachronistic figure. He has almost disappeared from British screens. His last two features, Miss Nobody (Panna Nikt, 1996) and Holy Week (Wielki Tydzien, 1996), failed to surface in British cinemas. His work is seldom seen on television. As he himself acknowledges, audiences have changed. In the late 90s, his brand of politically committed cinema no longer seems as relevant as when he first sprang to international prominence 40 years ago.
The prospective appearence on video of Wajda's famous trilogy about Polish wartime experience - A Generation (Pokolenie, 1954);Kanal and Ashes and Diamonds (Popiol i Diament, 1958), provides a reminder of just what an influential film-maker he used to be. The tentative way in which Eureka are handling the films suggests that they are not easy to sell. Ashes and Diamonds, the last in the trilogy, was the first released. Boasting a charismatic performance from Zbigniew Cybulski, "the Polish James Dean", as a world-weary fighter in the anti-communist resistance, it is the the most famous of the films and therefore, one imagines, the easiest to market. It is now followed by A Generation, the first part of the trilogy. Kanal (1957) may be released later this year.
When the 28 year old Wajda made A Generation, his debut feature, he was clearly in thrall to the Italian neo-realists. He eschewed the contrivance of studio film-making, preferring to work on location with young, untested actors. The opening shot, a long pan across a bleak, urban landscape accompanied by a haunting pipe music, wouldn't look out of place in a Rossellini film. The nostalgic voiceover, in which the narrator recalls his Warsaw childhood, is the same device Fellini uses in I Vitelloni.
At first, as we see three boys playing with a knife, this seems to be shaping up as a typical rites of passage story. But the gentle beginning belies the harshness of what follows. Bohdan Czeszko's screenplay, based on his own novel, is set in Warsaw in 1942, during the Nazi occupation. There is very little idyllic about the lives of the youngsters. If they transgress or join the resistance, they are liable to be executed. The protagonist Stach (Tadeusz Lomnicki) knows as much. He sees a friend shot by a Nazi sentry merely for trying to steal some coal. Walking the streets, he comes across the bodies of two patriots, hanging from a gallows in a public square (Wajda shows him staring transfixed at their dangling legs).
Just occasionally, a hint of agit-prop seeps into the storytelling. The young communists are portrayed as idealistic heroes. Some of the dialogue, notably when a Marxist old-timer in the carpentry workshop explains to Stach how he is exploited by his capitalist boss, sounds as if it was drafted by apparatchiks. Wajda was making the film for the government, who clearly regarded it as first and foremost a propaganda exercise. However, the energy and lyricism of the filmmaking counters the didacticism. As Roman Polanski, who plays one of the youngsters, put it, "for us, it was tremendously important. All of Polish cinema was beginning with it. . . we worked night and day. Wajda believed in what he was doing. This was something utterly new in Poland (it was the time of Stalinism) that film was different, young". (Quoted in Andrzej Wajda, by Boleslaw Michalek, Paris, 1964).
The protagonists are sucked into political resistance in spite of themselves. "The others say you're tough but I think you're a kid." Dorota (Urszula Modrzynska), the beautiful resistance leader tells Stach. At that moment, we realise just how young he really is. Wajda conveys both the exhilaration Stach and his friends feel when they have guns in their hands and their terror in the face of the violence and death they encounter. They are not allowed a childhood. As if to emphasise the fact, in one beautifully observed scene the smoke from the burning ghetto billows around the carousel at a funfair.
Just as Maciek (Cybulski) in Ashes and Diamonds is able to forget the political struggle for a moment when he has a brief affair, Stach too enjoys a short, doomed romance. The same mood of fatalism runs through both films. Wajda's heroes and heroines are attempting to resist the tide of history. It's a forlorn, even suicidal endeavour, but there is a very Polish heroism in their folly.
As the neo-realists discovered, bombed-out cities provide superbly atmospheric backdrops. In A Generation, Wajda makes excellent use of the wasteland and rubble-strewn streets of Warsaw. The chase sequence, in which Stach's friend Jasio (Tadesusz Janczar) flees his Nazi pursuers over roofs and down side-streets anticipates Maciek's equally forlorn dash for freedom at the end of Ashes and Diamonds. Wajda shows Jasio caught at the top of a maze-like stairwell with nowhere left to go. It's a highly symbolic moment - even at a dead-end, he refuses to surrender.
The Nazi occupation of Poland is a subject that Wajda returns to again and again in his work. As late as Holy Week, he was still obesssively raking over the period of the Warsaw uprisings. His best known films of the 70s and 80s, Man of Marble (Czlowiek z marmur, 1977) and Man of Iron (Czlowiek z zedaza, 1981), focus equally intently on the Poles' fight against the communist authorities. He thrives on opposition. Perhaps inevitably his work began to lose its urgency and relevance after the fall of the Iron Curtain.
A Generation stands up remarkably well. Whether it will find a new audience on video remains to be seen. If it does not, all Wajda fans are liable to lose out. Eureka only plan to release Kanal if sales of Ashes and Diamonds and A Generation make it seem worthwhile.
Geoffrey Macnab admires Wajda's classic trilogy
There was a time when Andrez Wajda was easily the best-known Polish film-maker in the west. One of the giants of post-war East European cinema, he exercised an enormous influence on young film-makers from Polanski and Kieslowski in Poland to Lindsay Anderson in the UK. The stark black-and-white imagery of wartime Warsaw in Spielberg's Schindler's List bears his imprint (it is no surprise that the production designer on that film was Allan Starski, one of Wajda's proteges).
Nowadays, though, Wajda seems a marginal, anachronistic figure. He has almost disappeared from British screens. His last two features, Miss Nobody (Panna Nikt, 1996) and Holy Week (Wielki Tydzien, 1996), failed to surface in British cinemas. His work is seldom seen on television. As he himself acknowledges, audiences have changed. In the late 90s, his brand of politically committed cinema no longer seems as relevant as when he first sprang to international prominence 40 years ago.
The prospective appearence on video of Wajda's famous trilogy about Polish wartime experience - A Generation (Pokolenie, 1954);Kanal and Ashes and Diamonds (Popiol i Diament, 1958), provides a reminder of just what an influential film-maker he used to be. The tentative way in which Eureka are handling the films suggests that they are not easy to sell. Ashes and Diamonds, the last in the trilogy, was the first released. Boasting a charismatic performance from Zbigniew Cybulski, "the Polish James Dean", as a world-weary fighter in the anti-communist resistance, it is the the most famous of the films and therefore, one imagines, the easiest to market. It is now followed by A Generation, the first part of the trilogy. Kanal (1957) may be released later this year.
When the 28 year old Wajda made A Generation, his debut feature, he was clearly in thrall to the Italian neo-realists. He eschewed the contrivance of studio film-making, preferring to work on location with young, untested actors. The opening shot, a long pan across a bleak, urban landscape accompanied by a haunting pipe music, wouldn't look out of place in a Rossellini film. The nostalgic voiceover, in which the narrator recalls his Warsaw childhood, is the same device Fellini uses in I Vitelloni.
At first, as we see three boys playing with a knife, this seems to be shaping up as a typical rites of passage story. But the gentle beginning belies the harshness of what follows. Bohdan Czeszko's screenplay, based on his own novel, is set in Warsaw in 1942, during the Nazi occupation. There is very little idyllic about the lives of the youngsters. If they transgress or join the resistance, they are liable to be executed. The protagonist Stach (Tadeusz Lomnicki) knows as much. He sees a friend shot by a Nazi sentry merely for trying to steal some coal. Walking the streets, he comes across the bodies of two patriots, hanging from a gallows in a public square (Wajda shows him staring transfixed at their dangling legs).
Just occasionally, a hint of agit-prop seeps into the storytelling. The young communists are portrayed as idealistic heroes. Some of the dialogue, notably when a Marxist old-timer in the carpentry workshop explains to Stach how he is exploited by his capitalist boss, sounds as if it was drafted by apparatchiks. Wajda was making the film for the government, who clearly regarded it as first and foremost a propaganda exercise. However, the energy and lyricism of the filmmaking counters the didacticism. As Roman Polanski, who plays one of the youngsters, put it, "for us, it was tremendously important. All of Polish cinema was beginning with it. . . we worked night and day. Wajda believed in what he was doing. This was something utterly new in Poland (it was the time of Stalinism) that film was different, young". (Quoted in Andrzej Wajda, by Boleslaw Michalek, Paris, 1964).
The protagonists are sucked into political resistance in spite of themselves. "The others say you're tough but I think you're a kid." Dorota (Urszula Modrzynska), the beautiful resistance leader tells Stach. At that moment, we realise just how young he really is. Wajda conveys both the exhilaration Stach and his friends feel when they have guns in their hands and their terror in the face of the violence and death they encounter. They are not allowed a childhood. As if to emphasise the fact, in one beautifully observed scene the smoke from the burning ghetto billows around the carousel at a funfair.
Just as Maciek (Cybulski) in Ashes and Diamonds is able to forget the political struggle for a moment when he has a brief affair, Stach too enjoys a short, doomed romance. The same mood of fatalism runs through both films. Wajda's heroes and heroines are attempting to resist the tide of history. It's a forlorn, even suicidal endeavour, but there is a very Polish heroism in their folly.
As the neo-realists discovered, bombed-out cities provide superbly atmospheric backdrops. In A Generation, Wajda makes excellent use of the wasteland and rubble-strewn streets of Warsaw. The chase sequence, in which Stach's friend Jasio (Tadesusz Janczar) flees his Nazi pursuers over roofs and down side-streets anticipates Maciek's equally forlorn dash for freedom at the end of Ashes and Diamonds. Wajda shows Jasio caught at the top of a maze-like stairwell with nowhere left to go. It's a highly symbolic moment - even at a dead-end, he refuses to surrender.
The Nazi occupation of Poland is a subject that Wajda returns to again and again in his work. As late as Holy Week, he was still obesssively raking over the period of the Warsaw uprisings. His best known films of the 70s and 80s, Man of Marble (Czlowiek z marmur, 1977) and Man of Iron (Czlowiek z zedaza, 1981), focus equally intently on the Poles' fight against the communist authorities. He thrives on opposition. Perhaps inevitably his work began to lose its urgency and relevance after the fall of the Iron Curtain.
A Generation stands up remarkably well. Whether it will find a new audience on video remains to be seen. If it does not, all Wajda fans are liable to lose out. Eureka only plan to release Kanal if sales of Ashes and Diamonds and A Generation make it seem worthwhile.
Last edited by colinr0380 on Wed Jan 05, 2005 12:12 pm, edited 3 times in total.
- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
- Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK
Zbigniew Cybulski who appears in A Generation and stars in Ashes and Diamonds died in 1967 and Wajda made a little tribute to him in the film Everything For Sale. Interestingly Cybulski named his son Maciek (I would guess in tribute to his role in Ashes and Diamonds)
Last edited by colinr0380 on Tue Jul 31, 2007 5:31 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- oldsheperd
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 5:18 pm
- Location: Rio Rancho/Albuquerque
- justeleblanc
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 6:05 pm
- Location: Connecticut
- Lino
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 6:18 am
- Location: Sitting End
- Contact:
- Donald Brown
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 3:21 pm
- Location: a long the riverrun
- Mr Pixies
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 10:03 pm
- Location: Fla
- Contact:
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:45 pm
- Location: Washington
- Contact:
Maybe they just can't release it in March and have decided to push it to April. I know it seems odd to not just change the date to April, but maybe since they haven't announced other April titles they didn't feel they should keep it posted. Just a thought.
But it's good news for me because now I can probably invest in other titles that month. Whoo-hoo!
But it's good news for me because now I can probably invest in other titles that month. Whoo-hoo!
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 7:24 pm
I was just thinking the same thing. When Kagemusha and Idaho were pushed back to March, the March titles had already been announced. Maybe they figure if they change the Wajdas to April (or May) on the site before the other titles for that month are announced, visitors might think that's all that's coming. I expect that there's been a slight delay (maybe artwork related, since it had been getting pretty late for that to still be unavailable) and the set will reappear on the site soon enough.
- Cinephrenic
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:58 pm
- Location: Paris, Texas