A major figure in the world of post-World War II Eastern European cinema,
Polish director Andrzej Wajda has chronicled his country's political and social
evolution with sensitivity, fervor, and a refusal to make compromises in dealing
with his difficult subjects. Once dubbed a symbol for his besieged country,
Wajda has repeatedly drawn from Poland's history to suit his tragic sensibility,
crafting an oeuvre of work that devastates even as it informs. (Hal
Erickson)
This 10-DVD's set includes ten movies:
Pan Tadeusz (The Last Foray in Lithuania ), 1999
Czlowiek z marmuru (Man of marble), 1977
Czlowiek z zelaza (Man of steel), 1981
Ziemia obiecana (The Promised Land ), 1975
Danton, 1983
Zemsta (The Revenge), 2002
Korczak, 1990
Panny z Wilka (Young Girls of Wilko), 1979
Krajobraz po bitwie (Landscape After Battle), 1970
Popioly (The Ashes), 1965
Andrzej Wajda Master Collection (10-DVD's)
Studio: Vision
Number of disks: 10
Condition: Brand New, Sealed, Mint
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital 2.0
Format: 16:9 / 4:3
Language version: Polish
Subtitles: English
Region: 2 (PAL). European or multi-system DVD player is required to see this
DVD.
A major figure in the world of post-World War II Eastern European cinema,
Polish director Andrzej Wajda has chronicled his country's political and social
evolution with sensitivity, fervor, and a refusal to make compromises in dealing
with his difficult subjects. Once dubbed a symbol for his besieged country,
Wajda has repeatedly drawn from Poland's history to suit his tragic sensibility,
crafting an oeuvre of work that devastates even as it informs. (Hal
Erickson)
This 10-DVD's set includes ten movies:
Pan Tadeusz (The Last Foray in Lithuania ), 1999
Czlowiek z marmuru (Man of marble), 1977
Czlowiek z zelaza (Man of steel), 1981
Ziemia obiecana (The Promised Land ), 1975
Danton, 1983
Zemsta (The Revenge), 2002
Korczak, 1990
Panny z Wilka (Young Girls of Wilko), 1979
Krajobraz po bitwie (Landscape After Battle), 1970
Popioly (The Ashes), 1965
DVD 1
Pan Tadeusz (The Last Foray in Lithuania ), 1999
Plot: For Poles, Lithuanians, Belarusians this is a movie that brings back
poignant nostalgia for the glorious past of the Duchy. For everyone else, it is
just another historical ballad, based on the classical poem of Adam Mickiewicz.
The film, which was made on a three-million dollar budget, beat all records of
popularity in Poland.
Cast: Boguslaw Linda, Grazyna Szapolowska, Andrzej Seweryn, Daniel Olbrychski
DVD 2
Czlowiek z marmuru (Man of marble), 1977
Plot: In 1976, a young woman in Krakow is making her diploma film, looking
behind the scenes at the life of a 1950s bricklayer, Birkut, who was briefly a
proletariat hero, at how that heroism was created, and what became of him. She
gets hold of outtakes and censored footage and interviews the man's friends,
ex-wife, and the filmmaker who made him a hero. A portrait of Birkut emerges: he
believed in the workers' revolution, in building housing for all, and his very
virtues were his undoing. Her hard-driving style and the content of the film
unnerve her supervisor, who kills the project with the excuse she's over budget.
Is there any way she can push the film to completion?
Cast: Jerzy Radziwilowicz, Krystyna Janda, Tadeusz Lomnicki, Krystyna
Zachwatowicz
DVD 3
Czlowiek z zelaza (Man of steel), 1981
Plot: A worker becomes a "man of iron" forged by experience, a son comes to
terms with his father, a couple fall in love, a reporter searches for courage,
and a nation undergoes historic change. In Warsaw in 1980, the Party sends
Winkel, a weak, alcoholic TV hack, to Gdansk to dig up dirt on the shipyard
strikers, particularly on Maciek Tomczyk, an articulate worker whose father was
killed in the December 1970 protests. Posing as sympathetic, Winkel interviews
people who know Tomczyk, including his detained wife, Agnieszka. Their
narrations become flashbacks using actual news footage of 1968 and 1970 protests
and of the later birth of free unions and Solidarity.
Cast: Jerzy Radziwilowicz, Krystyna Janda, Marian Opania, Boguslaw Linda
DVD 4
Ziemia obiecana (The Promised Land ), 1975
Plot: At the turn of the century, Lodz, Poland was a quick-paced
manufacturing center for textiles, replete with cutthroat industrialists and
unsafe working conditions. Three young friends, a Pole, a Jew and a German, pool
their money together to build a factory. The movie follows their ruthless
pursuit of fortune.
Cast: Daniel Olbrychski, Andrzej Seweryn, Wojciech Pszoniak, Anna Nehrebecka
DVD 5
Danton, 1983
Plot: Action opens in November of 1793, with Danton returning to Paris from
his country retreat upon learning that the Committee for Public Safety, under
Robespierre's incitement, has begun a series of massive executions, The Terror.
Confident in the peoples' support, Danton clashes with his former ally, but
calculating Robespierre soon rounds up Danton and his followers, tries them
before a revolutionary tribunal and dipatches them to the guillotine.
Cast: Gerard Depardieu, Wojciech Pszoniak, Anne Alvaro, Roland Blanche
DVD 6
Zemsta (The Revenge), 2002
Plot: A winter day at a Polish castle, half owned by a fatalistic notary and
half by a volcanic old soldier's niece. The old soldier, Cupbearer, and the
notary are sworn enemies, which may doom the love between the niece, Klara, and
the notary's son, Waclaw. On this day, the tongue-tied Cupbearer asks a braggart
courtier, Papkin, to sue on his behalf for the hand of the widow Hanna. Papkin
succeeds and the wedding is set for the next day. In response, the notary plots
to marry Waclaw to the widow to upend Cupbearer's plans. When Cupbearer learns
of this perfidy, he responds with his own plot. Will there be poison, a duel,
kidnapping, and imprisonment; or, will fate bring another solution?
Cast: Roman Polanski, Janusz Gajos, Andrzej Seweryn, Daniel Olbrychski
DVD 7
Korczak, 1990
Plot: Account of the last days of life of the legendary Polish pedagogue
Janusz Korczak and his heroic dedication to protecting Jewish orphans during the
war. Jewish doctor Henryk Goldszmit, known also as Janusz Korczak, is a man of
high principles. He is unafraid of shouting at German officers and frequently
has to be persuaded to save his own life. His orphanage, set up in a cramped
school in the Warsaw ghetto, provides shelter to 200 homeless kids. Putting his
experimental educational methods into practice, he installs a kind of children's
self-government, whose justice is in a big contrast to what is happening in the
outside world. Right in front of the school, dozens of kids are dying or being
killed everyday and their naked bodies lie on the street unattended. Ghetto's
mayor assures Korczak that the orphanages will be saved. Korczak raises food and
money for the orphanage from the rich Jews. In the final roundup he refuses to
accept a Swiss passport and boards the train to Treblinka with his orphans.
Cast: Wojciech Pszoniak, Ewa Dalkowska, Teresa Budzisz-Krzyzanowska, Zbigniew
Zamachowski
DVD 8
Panny z Wilka (Young Girls of Wilko), 1979
Plot: Set in the late 1920s. A thirtysomething young man, who heads a small
factory, faints at the funeral of a close friend. He decides to go home to his
aunt and uncle for a while, but gets involved with a family of five women who
had been in love with him at one time though he had apparently loved only one,
who, unknown to him, has died since his departure. The women are mainly
disillusioned with life or estranged from husbands while the youngest has a
crush on him.
Cast: Daniel Olbrychski, Anna Seniuk, Maja Komorowska, Stanislawa Celinska
DVD 9
Krajobraz po bitwie (Landscape After Battle), 1980
Plot: Film opens with the mad rush of haphazard freedom as the concentration
camps are liberated. Men are trying to grab food, change clothes, bury their
tormentors they find alive. Then they are herded into other camps as the Allies
try to devise policy to control the situation. A young poet who cannot quite
find himself in this new situation, meets a headstrong Jewish young girl who
wants him to run off with her, to the West. He cannot cope with her growing
demands for affection, while still harboring the hatred for the Germans and
disdain for his fellow men who quickly revert to petty enmities.
Cast: Daniel Olbrychski, Stanislawa Celinska, Aleksander Bardini, Tadeusz
Janczar
DVD 10
Popioly (The Ashes), 1965
Plot: Set in 19th century, during the time of Napoleon wars, shows how the
wars swept over the unfortunate Polish country at the beginning of the XIX-th
century. Story revolves around the Polish legion under command of General
Dabrowski, who then fought on Napoleon's side with the hopes of Poland's
revival.
Cast: Daniel Olbrychski, Boguslaw Kierc, Beata Tyszkiewicz, Pola Raksa
Bio:
Andrzej Wajda was born on March 6, 1926, in Suwalki, Poland. He described his
childhood as a happy pastoral country life before the Second World War. His
father, named Jakub Wajda, was captain in the Polish infantry and died at Katyn
massacre in 1939. His mother, named Aniela Wajda, was a teacher at a Ukrainian
school.
Young Wajda survived the Second World War with his mother and his brother in the
Nazi-occupied Poland. In 1946 he moved to Krakow. There Wajda went to the
Academy of Fine Arts. He studied painting, particularly the impressionist and
post-impressionist painting, and was especially fond of Paul Cezanne. From
1950-1954 he studied film directing at High Film School in Lodz under directors
Jerzy Toeplitz and Aleksander Ford. Wajda himself described the influential and
eye-opening experience from seeing the French avant-garde films, like Ballet
mécanique (1924) by artist-director Fernand Léger.
In 1955 he made his debut as director of a full-length Pokolenie (1955), about a
generation of youth coming out of age during the Nazi occupation of Poland. His
award-winning Kanal (1957) and Popiól i diament (1958) concluded the trilogy
about life in Poland during WWII. Although he was under pressure from the
Soviet-dominated Polish authorities, Wajda positioned himself as an artist who
was above the conflict. He still managed to show the undeclared civil war
between the Polish communists and the partisans folk heroes of the Home Army,
the two anti-Nazi Polish forces, which were divided by political ideology.
His Oscar-nominated Ziemia obiecana (1975) was a work of multi-layered allegory
and Symbolism. Wajda's witty depiction of the 19th century capitalism in Poland
actually alluded to the contemporary Communist politics. The shooting of workers
in the final scenes was actually demasking of the official politics of killing
workers in the Soviet Union in 1962, under Nikita Khrushchev, and in Poland a
few years later. The story of a film student who traces the life of defamed
"hero" in Czlowiek z marmuru (1977) was a deconstruction of the false
impressions that official propaganda was using to brainwash the public. The same
main characters in Czlowiek z zelaza (1981) continued unmasking the Communist
regime's manipulations against the "Solidarity" labor movement of Lech Walesa.
From 1989-1991 Wajda was elected Senator of the republic of Poland. From
1992-1994 he was Member of Presidential Council for Culture. In 1994 he founded
the Center of Japanese Art and Technology in Krakow, and was awarded the Order
of Rising Sun in Japan (1995). Wajda was President of Polish Film Assoiation
(1978-1983). He was Member of "Solidarity" Lech Walesa Council (1981-1989). He
won an honorary Oscar (2000) for his contribution to cinema, and an honorary
Golden Bear (2006) at the Berlin Film Festival.