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Polish Cultural Institutes
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Film director, screenwriter, writer, born 14 June 1959 in Łódź. Pasikowski says he was doomed to become a filmmaker from his early years: "My parents worked two different shifts. My mum finished work at 4 p.m. and my father started at 2 p.m., which left the two hours when they did not know what to do with me. As my father worked in a cinema's box office, he would take me there to watch films" (from one of Pasikowski's few interviews - he avoids them like the plague - given to "Film" no. 03, 1998.In 1978-83 Pasikowski was a student of culture studies with a focus on film studies at Łódź University. One of his fellow students there was Paweł Edelman, who would become the cameraman on all of his films. Pasikowski then went on to study directing at the Łódź Film School in 1983-88. Though he was not doing very well, his diploma-qualifying work, "Stasiek", made under the guidance of Filip Bajon, got him an A+. Pasikowski would later reminisce that he and his friend, the Macedonian Mitko Panov, analyzed the student films and together they selected the most common motifs. Pasikowski describes them as follows: "We concluded that it could not be a film about the Vietnamese - it had to be a thing about a simple man and there should be the hopeless wandering around a dirty town instead of a plot, and that the gloomy picture needed to have a poetic end."After a stint as an assistant on Andrzej Konic's series "Pogranicze w ogniu / The Burning Border", Pasikowski directed his first film, "Kroll", for which he is grateful to Filip Bajon and Juliusz Machulski: to the former, because it was Bajon who "made me realize that I would leave the school shortly and would end up looking for a film topic. It is owing to him that I wrote some four scripts in my third and fourth years as a student, including 'Kroll' " ("Psy w kinie..."). Machulski, in turn, was the producer of both "Kroll" (which turned out the top Polish box office success of 1992) and of the subsequent "Psy / Pigs", a picture which attracted what was at the time a staggering audience of 300 000. Incidentally, Pasikowski's "Psy II: Ostatnia krew" ["Pigs 2. The last blood"] had twice as many viewers, a record which none of his later films would be able to break. In 1998 his fans honoured Pasikowski with 1990s Best Director Award, saying that Pasikowski's films were primarily about love - as well as being about violence. In 1993 Pasikowski published "Ja, Gelerth", a science-fiction novel which was nominated for the Janusz A. Zajdel annual science-fiction award. His other achievements include the production of "Who Is Afraid of Virginia Woolf" at Warsaw's Teatr Powszechny in 2002. Pasikowski will make history of Polish filmmaking as the one who created one of the icons of Polish mass culture, Franz Mauer [Bogusław Linda], the main character of "Psy". So far the best film he has made, it further advanced Pasikowski's status as a macho filmmaking expert (which he had acquired with "Kroll") as well earning him the reputation of a provoker. After all, making a policeman who was a security service officer a positive hero in 1992, shortly after the political transformation, was a risky business, though, surprisingly for many, it hit the bullseye. "I asked the makers of the film, Władysław Pasikowski and Paweł Edelman, what had given them an idea to make heros of people who were responsible for the dirty aspect of our past", reminisces Marek Kondrat, who appeared in "Psy" side by side with Linda. "They told me they just wanted to make a good, commercially successful film" ("Gazeta Wyborcza", 3-4 June 2006). It was already as a student that Pasikowski showed an interest in action films. This did not endear him to the professors of the Łódź School. "What films would you like to make?", asked Filip Bajon at a tutorial. "Such as Spielberg makes", came the haughty answer. Pasikowski, who has often been compared to Quentin Tarantino because of the bloody scenes which take place in gangster circles and the gallows humour, names Sam Peckinpah, Martin Scorsese and Pierre Melville, the master of French police films evocative of Hollywood's 1940s and 1950s film noir, as his masters. Pasikowski likes to be perceived as a filmmaking professional and an accomplished craftsman, stressing his lack of interest in conveying messages and his preference for telling 'fairytales for adults'. The strength of "Kroll" and "Psy", however, lay not in them being confabulated stories for grown-up children or sheer thrillers. Both pinpointed the dark areas of Polish realities: bullying in the army ("Kroll") and the state's impotence in dealing with organized crime. The busy amphetamine manufactures, the bloody gangster fights and the mafia which led the police by the nose were not just an attractive scenery for an action film. Having seen "Psy", Andrzej Wajda repeated incredulously that Pasikowski knew something about the Polish viewers he had no idea about. Pasikowski said to Maciej Pawlicki in an interview given after "Psy 2": "Let me tell you what I know about the viewer of 'my' films. To me history is '56, but to him it is '81. He has twenty satellite channels on which the longest shot is six seconds' long. (...) His world is not divided into the East and the West, but into the bad and the good. He has his passport in his pocket and enough brains to learn English, but more than anything he has this terrible craving for the fundamental values of love, peace, honesty, family, justice." ("Film", April 1994)Critics, however, were hard put to find these values in Pasikowski's films. "I had never thought I would ever, and definitely not so soon, see a convincing film about a likeable secret service agent", wrote Maciej Pawlicki ("Spsienie", "Film" no. 2, 17th January 1993). "How does it feel to invent bestial scenes? Do you feel the joy of creating?", asked Bożena Janicka ("Film" no. 9, 7th March 1993), referring to the tortures and the splashing blood in "Psy". This explosive mix of bluntness, brutality and beastliness combined with the world of values represented by Franz, a cynic who detaches himself from politics and religion and at the same time an idealist to whom honour and friendship are sacred things, was a novelty in Polish filmmaking. "Psy" have unleashed extreme emotions, leaving no-one indifferent. According to Juliusz Machulski, the aggression which had never been shown in Polish commercial productions "had a cleansing effect on the audience" (Machina, April 1998). What happened to Pasikowski's later career as a filmmaker was the opposite of what happened with suspense in Alfred Hitchcock's films: instead of building up, it started to slacken. Although it attracted an audience of 700 000, "Psy II: Ostatnia Krew" was no more than a well-told story in which Franz's dilemmas rang a false note. Pasikowski's next picture, "Słodko-gorzki / Bittersweet", showed the milieu of high-school students who were imitations of Pasikowski's favourite heroes: eighteen-year-olds pretended they were tough guys, their girlfriends were impressed by boys with money. It was in such a bittersweet world that Mateusz, an idealist and bookworm trying to understand why his friend had committed suicide, had to find his place. What made Pasikowski make a teenager picture after three very tough films? "A pile of scripts sits on my desk. I have chosen this one because it was the cheapest - and I still have no money to do the others", said Pasikowski at a press conference held on "Słodko-gorzki"'s location. Pasikowski's following films suffered not only from the lack of money but also of goods scripts and producers. The plots of "Demony wojny wg Goi / Demons of War by Goya" (1998) and "Operacja Samum / Operation Simoom" (1999) are set abroad, in former Yugoslavia and in Israel, respectively. Neither made big waves; even the male/female themes left the audience unmoved, although previously Kazimiera Szczuka no less than called Pasikowski (in the magazine 'Kino') a 'prisoner' "of obsessive and compulsory, unflagging virility which leads to self-destruction and aggression towards all those who threaten to tear off the mask". It obviously goes to Pasikowski's credit that there are times when he is able to stand back from his usual very serious approach to his characters. The premiere of "Reich" (2001), a story of two hit men coming to Poland at the request of their German boss, left the journalists confused. The audience could barely help laughing at the media show: has Pasikowski made a parody of his own films? If so, he did so unwittingly. Pasikowski's future pictures will find it hard catching up with "Psy", of which Bogusław Linda has said: "(...) it is one of the most important Polish films of the 1990s. ... going far beyond the craft of gangster films, introducing a new esthetics and a new type of a hero to Polish filmmaking. Of course, Pasikowski's subsequent pictures were just actions films, and may or may not have been made. But I put 'Psy' on a par with the films of the cinema of moral concern" ("Gazeta Wyborcza", 15th December 2000). Filmography School etudes:
Miscellaneous:
Author: Małgorzata Fiejdasz, December 2006 |
Browsing history
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() RECENTLY ADDED
![]() March 9-21, "Summer at Nohant" / "Lato w Nohant", directed by Hanna Bondarewska, the original play by Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz, translated by Celina Wieniewska - Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint, Washington, D.C. Idil Biret, world renowned Turkish pianist performs all Chopin programme - March 21, the Henrietta Barnett School, London. March 26 and 27 - Paderewski Symphony Orchestra: Celebration of Chopin's 200th Anniversary - Chicago Symphony Center. March 27 - Chopin Anniversary Marathon: faculty and graduate students performs a variety of solo and chamber music repertoire - Alfred Newman Recital Hall, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. March 28 - Lira Ensemble: Chopin Bicentennial Concert - Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, Northwestern University, Chicago. The 7th edition of "Misteria Paschalia" in Kraków will take place on March 29 - April 5, 2010. "The Magic Tree / Magiczne drzewo" directed by Andrzej Maleszka is a winner of BAMmie for Best Feature Film - prestigious award for the audience favorites of the 12th Annual BAMkids Film Festival - organized by the Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York.
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