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A towering
figure of Eastern European cinema, Krzysztof Kieslowski was
born in Warsaw, Poland on June 27, 1941. His formative years,
spent under the specters of Hitler and Stalin, were nomadic;
his father suffered from tuberculosis, and the family traveled
from one sanatorium to another. At the age of 16 Kieslowski
entered Fireman's Training College. His stay was short-lived,
instilling a lifelong loathing of uniforms and disciplines. To
avoid military service he returned to school, later attending
the Warsaw College for Theatre Technicians. In 1965, after
several previous rejections, he was finally accepted into the
famed Lodz Film School -- the same institution which launched
the careers of Roman Polanski, Andrzej Wadja, Jerzy
Skolimowski and Krzysztof Zanussi -- and made his first short
feature, Tramwaj (The Tram), the following year.
The communist-controlled Poland of the 1960s and 1970s was a
nation of great political unrest. Consequently, film emerged
as a crucial means of communication as well as a kind of
social conscience, carefully and implicitly (to avoid the
wrath of government censors) depicting a way of life denied by
Party dominance. At the time, documentaries were considered as
artistically important and commercially viable as features.
With 1966's Urzad (The Office), Kieslowski first turned to the
documentary format, satirizing bureaucratic policy via a
state-owned insurance office. After briefly returning to
fictional narratives with the 1967 short Koncert Zyczen
(Concert of Requests), he helmed 1968's Zdjecie (The
Photograph), a 32-minute documentary produced for Polish
television. |
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Upon
graduating in 1969, Kieslowski's focus turned exclusively to
documentary filmmaking beginning with Z Miasta Lodzi (From the
City of Lodz). His early professional work consisted of
a series of one-act films designed to be shown in theaters as
supporting material along with features. Among Kieslowski's
documentaries of the early 1970s were Bylem Zolnierzem (I Was
a Soldier), Fabryka (Factory), Przed Rajdem (Before the Rally)
and Refren (Refrain). In 1972 he released a pair of films
commissioned by the Lubin Copper Mine, Miedzy Wroclawiem a
Zielona Gora (Between Wroclaw and Zielona Gora) and Podstawy
BHP w Koplani Miedzi (The Principles of Safety and Hygiene in
a Copper Mine). Robotnicy '71: Nic o Nas Bez Nas (Workers '71:
Nothing About Us Without Us), an account of the December 1970
strike which helped lead to the downfall of First Secretary of
the Communist Polish United Workers' Party Wladyslaw Gomulka,
soon followed.
After
the 1973 documentary Murarz (Bricklayer), Kieslowski made his
first television drama, Przejscie Podziemne (Pedestrian
Subway). Upon completing a pair of 1974 documentaries,
Przeswietlenie (X-Ray) and Pierwsza Milosc (First Love), he
helmed 1975's Zyciorys (Curriculum vitae), a "dramatic
documentary" depicting the cross-examination of a
Communist Party member threatened with expulsion. While his
story was fictional, the Party Control Committee deciding his
fate was real. The project was the subject of considerable
controversy and criticism, and many Poles charged that
Kieslowski had flirted with the Party in making the film.
Throughout the remainder of his career, public consensus on
the director remained split in his native land -- many greatly
admired his work, while others considered him an opportunist,
as well as a traitor to himself and his country. |

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Despite his high level of visibility at home, Kieslowski
remained unknown throughout the rest of the world. He did not
make his first feature-length TV drama until 1975, debuting
with Personel. After a pair of 1976 documentaries, Szpital
(Hospital) and Klaps (Slate), he made his theatrical feature
bow that same year with Blizna (The Scar). The TV drama Spokoj
(The Calm) followed in quick succession, with three more
documentaries -- Z Punktu Widzenia Nocnego Portiera (From a
Night Porter's Point of View), Nie Wiem (I Don't Know) and
Siedem Kobiet w Roznym Wieku (Seven Women of Different Ages)
-- appearing over the next two years. Finally, the 1979
feature Amator (Camera Buff) launched Kieslowski to the
forefront of the international cinema community. A satire
about a factory worker (Jerzy Stuhr, who with Kieslowski
co-wrote the screenplay) who becomes obsessed with his new 8
mm camera to the point of jeopardizing his marriage and job,
the movie won the Grand Prix at the Moscow Film Festival,
garnering global recognition for its director.
With the dawn of the 1980s came a period of Polish upheaval.
In August 1980, the year Kieslowski released the documentaries
Dworzec (Station) and Gadajace Glowy (Talking Heads), the free
trade union dubbed Solidarity was born. A period of societal
freedom followed, and Kieslowski mounted a pair of 1981
features, Przypadek (Blind Chance) and Krotki Dzien Pracy
(Short Working Day) both openly critical of communist control.
However, in December 1981 martial law was declared throughout
Poland, effectively bringing the nation's film industry to its
knees: film stock was in short supply, and equipment --
previously supplied by state-financed production houses -- was
no longer made available. Under such impossible conditions,
Kieslowski attempted to undertake several projects, with
little success. Even after martial law was suspended in 1982,
the country's financial outlook was grim, and apart from the
1984 feature Bez Konca (No End) he did not work again for many
years. |
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Finally,
in 1988 Kieslowski was given the green-light to begin filming
The Decalogue, a ten-part miniseries commissioned for Polish
television. Even as he turned more and more towards drama,
Kieslowski insisted that his work remained true to the
principles of documentary filmmaking, his movies evolving less
through action than ideas. Nowhere was this more apparent than
in The Decalogue, a decidedly apolitical series, based on the
Ten Commandments, exploring the lives of a group of tenants in
a Warsaw housing estate. The ambitious project was a success
with both viewers and critics, and two of the episodes (A
Short Film About Love and A Short Film About Killing,
respectively) were eventually extended into feature-length
pictures and distributed internationally. The latter won a
Jury prize at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival, as well as
Europe's coveted Felix Award.
With
the fall of communism throughout Eastern Europe, Solidarity
was reinstated in 1989, and Poland became a free nation for
the first time since the end of World War II. In the face of
continued financial troubles, however, Kieslowski relocated to
France, where he completed 1991's masterful The Double Life of
Veronique, another global success.
In
1993 he mounted the "Three Colors" trilogy, a
triptych based on the colors of the French flag and their
symbolic representations; the first film, Blue, a meditation
on liberty, won several Cesar Awards (France's equivalent of
the Oscars), and also netted a handful of Golden Globe
nominations, including a "Best Actress" nomination
for star Juliette Binoche.
White,
an essay on equality which garnered Kieslowski the Silver Bear
Award for direction at the Berlin International Film Festival,
followed later that same year.
However,
it was the final film in the trilogy, 1994's Red, which
brought Kieslowski his greatest acclaim. An exploration of
fraternity featuring Veronique star Irene Jacob, it was a
tremendous commercial and critical favorite, collecting
nominations from the Cesars and Golden Globes. Kieslowski even
earned an Academy Award nomination for "Best
Director." At the peak of his powers, the filmmaker chose
to walk away from the limelight, and upon the completion of
Red he announced his retirement from movies.
Reportedly,
he was considering a return to the cinema with a new trilogy
based around the themes of heaven, hell and purgatory when, on
March 13, 1996, he entered the hospital to undergo open-heart
surgery. Tragically, Kieslowski suffered a heart attack while
on the operating table and died. He was 54 years old.
--
Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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