Rough Treatment (Wajda, 1978): BFI Southbank, NFT3, 8.30pm
This presentation is part of the Andrzej Wajda season at BFI Southbank. The screening of Rough Treatment on Monday 9th March will be introduced by film critic and scholar Michał Oleszczyk.
Time Out review:
Rough Treatment takes up where Man of Marble left off,
with its exploration of the contemporary (1978) political situation in
Poland and its pursuit of the relationship between the individual and
society. The film follows the downfall of an urbane and well-known
political correspondent (a phenomenal performance from Zbigniew Zapasiewicz), who
steps out of line during a TV interview and simultaneously discovers
that his wife is leaving him. The cold, grey society of which he's part
is discovered in the grim attitudes of those around him; at the same
time his own faults and inadequacies build with every scene. Working in
the wake of the censorship problems which beset Man of Marble, Andrzej Wajda had this to say on its release: 'I worked on this film in a blind
rage...it has no flourishes. Its impact was to come solely from a
logically constructed chain of events'. The end isn't entirely
satisfactory, but that doesn't matter - the rest is fascinating, and
he's already made his point.
Here (and above) is the trailer.
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