Identification Marks: None

1965 [POLISH]

Drama

Plot summary

The footloose ennui of Poland’s postwar generation is captured to perfection in this jazzy chronicle of a draft-dodger’s final day of freedom. A slacker before there was a word for it, Andrzej (played by Skolimowski himself) drifts through a series of open-ended encounters with women following a wake-up argument with his pouting wife, and a long-delayed military physical (the film’s title derives from one of the questions). Skolimowski hoarded four years’ worth of the annual film footage allotment from his Lódz film school in order to create this first feature marked by compositional bravado and a trademark air of the absurd. -Barbara Scharres, Gene Siskel Film Center


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
December 29, 2023 at 03:44 PM

Top cast

Jerzy Skolimowski as Andrzej Leszczyc
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
690 MB
1280*706
Polish 2.0
NR
us  de  es  fr  it  pt  nl  tr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 15 min
Seeds 2
1.25 GB
1920*1060
Polish 2.0
NR
us  de  es  fr  it  pt  nl  tr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 15 min
Seeds 2
663.41 MB
1280*706
Polish 2.0
NR
us  de  es  fr  it  pt  nl  tr  
25 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds 1
1.2 GB
1920*1060
Polish 2.0
NR
us  de  es  fr  it  pt  nl  tr  
25 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by thor153 8 / 10

Nice debut for a not such famous polish filmmaker

Identity marks: None Opera prima with all the strength and claw of someone who clings to a project as if it were a lifeboat moments before a shipwreck.

Dispersed film unified through the freedoms that Modernity with a baroque tendency (It is a Polish film in the sixties) promoted.

I'm a sucker for first films and black and white, but without a doubt (and Jean Luc Godard and the Mubi streaming service vouch for me) this is a great movie.

It is a short film, made up of a small succession of long shots.

Although the story proposes to tell: A day in the life of a man for whom circumstances have outgrown him.

Unlike its protagonist, played by himself, the story and its circumstances were not great for Mr. Skolimowski who manages to present his proposal, making inspired use of his shortcomings.

Poland has been a breeding ground for good cinema since the Lodz film school was founded. It's nice to find the beginning of other great filmmakers.

(Skolimowski is a co-writer on Knife in the Toilet, so many moviegoers know his work even if they can't pronounce his last name.)

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by allenrogerj 7 / 10

Polish rebel without a cause

Jerzy Skolimowski shows his characteristic interests and obsessions, a portrait of a superfluous man, a strange mixture of absurdism and surrealism with long, incredibly complex takes. It consists of part of Andrzej Leszczyc's day; his dog has been bitten by a rabid dog, his mistress is discontented, the conscription board have finally caught up with him and because he's dropped out of university he's going to do two years in the navy, leaving at three o'clock that afternoon. He wanders around town, takes his dog- he didn't bother to immunise it, which perhaps typifies his indifference and carelessness, even with what he loves- to be put down, meets another ex-student, then ardently political- official political, of course, mow a pimp and conman, meets a girl who wants to study ichthyology, the course Leszczyc only took to keep out of the army and that the one-armed chairman of the recruitment board cannot pronounce, seduces a woman set up by the ex-student, breaks up with his mistress and finally- just-in-time- gets the train with other conscripts. Along the way he tells lies pointlessly and compulsively. All the same, Leszczyc may be an immature creep but there are some good qualities to him which can't appear in this society. As you'd expect with Skolimowski, it isn't realistic. Either Elzbieta Czyzewska plays all the female parts, or they're all the same woman pretending without Leszczyc noticing- we can't tell. In the end she runs alongside the train that takes Leszczyc away looking up at it and the film ends. There are extraordinary shots- long tracking shots through the streets- one, towards the end, down six storeys of stairs, is astonishing, another as Leszczyc and the would-be ichthyologist walk through a timber plant where the camera accompanies them from one end to the other. Yes,they're cheap ways to shoot, but when it's as well done as this it's rather more. Not a great film, but an intelligent film that shows the director's talents superbly.

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