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The 'Three Colours' Trilogy
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This appreciative account of the 'Three Colours' trilogy communicates the power and imagery of the films, and demonstrates how Kieslowski's art is brought to bear in their moving renditions of the lives of its characters. An interview with Kieslowsi shortly before his death concludes this tribute.
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1 Before the Trilogy
Krzysztof KieĆlowski was born in Warsaw in June 1941, the beginning of an unsettled childhood, not only because of the war and its aftermath but because his father suffered from tuberculosis, forcing the family to travel from one sanatorium town to another. Krzysztof sometimes changed school several times a year, but he performed well academically, though he found school of little value. Because he too had poor lungs, he spent a lot of time at home reading, and it was through books, he later claimed, that he realised âthere was something more to life than material things which you can touch or buy in shopsâ.2
At the age of sixteen, KieĆlowski trained for three months as a fireman, but, partly to avoid military service, he returned to his studies at Warsawâs College for Theatre Technicians, where he fell in love with the theatre. Since it was impossible to become a stage director without qualifications in higher education, he then applied to the Ćodz Film School; only on his third attempt did he succeed, by which time he was no longer interested in pursuing a theatrical career. Nevertheless, he enjoyed his four years at Ćodz, watching and discussing films, and making both features and documentaries.
It was during this period that KieĆlowski developed an interest in politics; in 1968, just before graduating, he took part in a student strike. Such activities, however, were hardly uncommon at that time, especially in Poland, where from 1968 onwards the Communist Party steadily reversed the slow, tentative progress towards greater personal, public and artistic freedom that had begun under Wladyslaw Gomulka. The post-â68 period of civil unrest, food shortages and widespread disillusionment, resulted in the rise of an uncensored underground press and âThe Flying Universityâ, which held lectures, discussions and other cultural gatherings in private houses; it was also a time when documentaries achieved an unprecedented popularity, purporting to show the realities of life as experienced by ordinary Poles, as opposed to the falsifications of Party propaganda. On graduating from film school, therefore, it seemed natural to KieĆlowski to begin his professional film-making career as a documentarist.
Given the pervasive presence of politics in Polish life under the repressive Edward Gierek, it was perhaps inevitable that many of KieĆlowskiâs documentaries concerned people working for, or fighting against, State institutions: Factory (Fabryka, 1970) alternated scenes of workers at the Ursus tractor factory with a management board meeting about the plantâs inability to meet its production quota; Workers â71 (Robotnicy â71, 1972) was an attempt âto portray the workersâ state of mindâ3 after the strikes of 1970 and the downfall of Gomulka; Hospital (Szpital, 1976) charted the determination of orthopaedic surgeons on a 32-hour shift to overcome dismal working conditions; and From a Night Porterâs Point of View (Z Punktu Widzenia Nocnego Portiera, 1977) was a portrait of a fanatically right-wing, disciplinarian factory porter. Despite, however, the often controversial nature of KieĆlowskiâs subject matter and approach (which resulted in some of his films being shelved for years) and the fact that in the late 1970s he became involved, as vice-president to Andrzej Wajda, in the struggles of the Polish Film-Makersâ Association for greater artistic freedom (âWe were completely insignificant,â he told Danusia Stok),4 KieĆlowski later insisted that his documentaries had been intended not as examinations of repressive political institutions but as portraits of individuals made from a humanistic point of view.
And indeed, there is some justification for this claim. While From a Night Porterâs Point of View does, through its gentle mockery of the porterâs extreme, conservative views on crime, punishment and authority, have clear social, political and ethical implications, it is at the same time primarily a (surprisingly sympathetic) character study of a rather sad and unfulfilled man. Likewise, if Talking Heads (GadajÄ
ce GĆowy, 1980), which asks seventy-nine Poles when they were born, what they do, and what they would most like, offers tantalising insights into the nature of contemporary Polish society, it also, by moving in quick linear fashion from the youngest to the oldest interviewee, becomes a universally applicable essay on the emotional, physical and psychological effects of ageing. One senses that, even at this stage in his career, whatever interest Kieslowski had in the world of politics derived largely from his fascination with its effects upon the individual. Increasingly, however, he came to feel that this fundamentally humanist fascination was ill served by documentary: the very process of making documentaries, because it invaded peopleâs privacy, prevented him from getting as close to the heart of personal experience as he wanted, while actors, in fiction film, might allow him greater access to the realm of peopleâs inner lives.
âWhat if âŠ?â: Blind Chance, a film in the conditional mood
After General Wojciech Jaruzelskiâs clampdown on the free trade union Solidarity and the introduction of martial law in December 1981, KieĆlowski seems to have become increasingly disillusioned with politics. By this time, he had virtually abandoned documentary work for fiction features, achieving his first international success with Camera Buff (Amator, 1979), a droll satire in which a manâs progress from shooting home-movies of his family to making documentaries about and for the factory where he works brings him into conflict with his censorious bosses. Clearly, there was more than a hint of political comment here, as there would be in Blind Chance (Przypadek, 1981), in which a medical student runs to catch a train, with three potentially different outcomes: he catches it, falls in with a Communist and becomes a Party activist (resulting in his betrayal of a girlfriend); he crashes into a station guard who, by having him arrested and brought to trial, inadvertently drives him to join the militant underground; or he misses it, bumps into a lover he later marries, completes his studies with considerable success, ignores politics and finally, sent abroad on a trip that is the crowning point of his career to date, dies in a plane crash. Again, the various options of political life in Poland determine the filmâs subject matter, although KieĆlowski himself saw it as âno longer a description of the outside world but rather of the inner worldâ.5 Certainly, itâs impossible to ignore certain crucial, non-political, philosophical elements â crossed wires, interwoven lives, the mysterious, cruelly ironic workings of fate and chance, the narrativeâs âconditionalâ mood of âwhat if?â, all which occur, with increasing frequency and sophistication, in his later work.
Thus, in No End (Bez KoĆca, 1984), the widow of a lawyer, who at the time of his death was preparing to defend a victim of martial law, gradually becomes involved in the struggle to save the young worker from the authorities; her actions, however, are less the result of growing political commitment than of her being prompted, as it were, by her husbandâs ghost who, mostly unseen except by the audience, watches over her in her solitude. While the film offers a lucid account of how self-serving bureaucracy and an embattled judiciary make for political and moral compromise (âMartial law was really a defeat for everyone,â KieĆlowski told Stok),6 the director was equally fascinated by the metaphysical and emotional aspects of the story. The film ends with the widow, unable to bear her grief any longer, committing suicide so that she may be reunited with her beloved husband. Politically the film may be despairing, even defeatist, but on a humanistic level, its conclusion, with wife and husband united once more in a world KieĆlowski regarded as âa little better than the one in which weâre immersedâ, is one of transcendent devotion.
Living with ghosts: GraĆŒyna Szapolowska in No End
It was while preparing No End that KieĆlowski first embarked on what would become an enduring collaborative partnership with Krzysztof Piesiewicz, a lawyer he met while making a documentary on trials under martial law. (The film was never completed, since KieĆlowski found that his cameraâs presence in the courtrooms seemed to encourage judges to pass unusually lenient sentences, which therefore mitigated against the accuracy of his film!) Because the director felt himself ignorant of court procedure, he invited Piesiewicz to help with the legal details in the script of No End; the partnership worked so well that they revived their collaboration for KieĆlowskiâs subsequent The Decalogue (Dekalog, 1988), a ten-part series made for Polish television after Piesiewicz suggested the director consider a film about the Ten Commandments and their relevance to the modern world.
Originally, KieĆlowskiâs intention was to write the ten episodes â two of which were shot in alternative longer versions (as A Short Film About Killing and A Short Film About Love) for cinema release â and then hand them over to ten young, first-time film-makers at the Tor Production House (which KieĆlowski was running as deputy to Krzysztof Zanussi). By the time the scripts had reached the first-draft stage, however, KieĆlowski liked them so much that he decided to direct them himself (though he did select nine different cameramen for the ten episodes). The result was one of the most impressive achievements in modern film-making. Keeping the political realities of contemporary Polish life in the background, the aim was to focus on the âinternal livesâ of the various protagonists â all inhabitants of a Warsaw housing estate â as they made their âconcrete everyday decisionsâ about various ethical and emotional dilemmas associated in one way or another with the Commandments. Characteristically, KieĆlowski refrained from offering simplistic, moralistic comments on what he felt was right or wrong; instead, rather like Eric Rohmerâs series of Contes moraux, the films were cool, pragmatic studies of the problems faced by people who âdonât really know why they are livingâ;7 people who feel lonely and uncertain about particular aspects of their lives, and want to achieve some sense of happiness, of belonging, of having done their best with regard to what is ârightâ for them. Inevitably, given KieĆlowskiâs self-confessed pessimism, they often fail, or if they succeed, it is usually at a painful price. Besides being a magnum opus in its own right, The Decalogue is also, as we shall see later, of considerable interest for the way in which it anticipates in many respects aspects of the Three Colours trilogy: most notably, perhaps, the accent on loneliness and dysfunctional families; the importance of love; and the way in which KieĆlowskiâs narrative forges strange, unexpected connections between different characters.
A Short Film About Killing
Soul sister: IrĂšne Jacob in The Double Life of VĂ©ronique
KieĆlowskiâs next film, again written with Piesiewicz, took him still further away from the specifically Polish experience, not only in that it was his first international co-production, but because its subject matter is perhaps best described as spiritual. The Double Life of VĂ©ronique (La Double vie de VĂ©ronique/PodwĂłjne ZÌycie Weroniki, 1991) concerns the strange, mysterious links between the lives of two physically identical young women born at the same time on the same day: the Polish Weronika, a budding soprano with a weak heart and an indecisive attitude towards her lover, ...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Interpreting the Trilogy
- 1. Before the Trilogy
- 2. Making the Trilogy
- 3. Three Colours: Blue
- 4. Three Colours: White
- 5. Three Colours: Red
- 6. The Trilogy: Connections
- 7. The Trilogy: Reflections
- 8. The Trilogy: Coda
- 9. Elegy: Remembering KieĆlowski
- Notes
- Credits
- Bibliography
- eCopyright