Film Review
After two decades of comparative obscurity, director Roman Polanski regained his international
reputation with a vengeance in 2002 when he won the Palme d'Or at Cannes for
The Pianist
, very probably his best film to date. The film is based on the war-time experiences
of a Polish Jew, Wladyslaw Szpilman, who narrowly escaped death during the Holocaust and
became, after the war, one of the world's most distinguished pianists.
One of Szpilman's first acts after the war was to write up his war-time experiences in
a novel, published in 1946 as “Death of a City”. Soon after publication, the book
was banned by Polish Communist officials and was not available in print until 1998, entitled
“The Pianist”. Polanki's film is a faithful adaptation of the book which graphically
illustrates the terror of the war from the perspective of a man whose only wish is to
stay alive - without resorting to stereotypical notions of heroism or cowardice.
Polanski himself was scarred by the Holocaust - his mother died at Auschwitz and he only
survived because he was smuggled out of the Krakow ghetto as a baby. It is perhaps
this personal relationship with the subject which enabled Polanski to create one of cinema's
most haunting and evocative films about the Holocaust, a film which is nothing less than
a cinematic masterpiece and confirms Polanski's standing as one of true great directors
in cinema history.
The film's impact lies in the way it places its principal character, Szpilman, at the
centre of the drama and presents his experiences in a way which an outsider can relate
to. The character does not have to use words to articulate what he feels - we know
what he feels because we can see ourselves in his predicament, to the extent that every
shock he experiences passes directly into our consciousness and creates the illusion that
we are sharing his trauma. And there is plenty to shock. The brutality
of Nazi soldiers has rarely been depicted so graphically on a cinema screen as in this
film. There is a viciousness in their brutality which goes way beyond the bounds
of human comprehension - this is human nature at its absolute worst, and it is horrifying
to see it.
Although the film's depiction of the Nazis is generally as one might expect (consistent
with the historical evidence), Polanski does not shrink from showing less palatable truths
- the fact that some Poles were collaborators who were every bit as bad as their Nazi
overlords, the fact that some non-Jewish Poles risked their lives to help their Jewish
compatriots, and even that not all Nazis were bad. As the film recounts in
one of its most poignant sequences, Szpilman himself was saved from certain death by a
German officer - although, tragically, he was unable to repay the debt.
As gripping and traumatic as the first half of the film is, it is only in the second half
of
The Pianist that Polanski shows his true genius. Szpilman's struggle
to survive after the sudden loss of his family is portrayed as an almost surreal nightmare
- indeed some of the cinematography portraying the destruction of Warsaw sends the film
over the edge into stark surrealism, so far is it from our own personal experiences.
So bleak, so desparingly devoid of hope are these images that the film's spectator is
barely able to detach himself from the world he finds himself unexpectedly immersed in.
By projecting the viewer into the heart of an exceptional drama,
The Pianist offers
a unique and totally unforgettable experience. This is cinema at its most devastatingly
effective.
Having won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 2002,
The Pianist went on to win international
critical acclaim and a brace of coveted awards. The latter included no less than
7 Césars in 2003 (for best film, best director, best actor, best cinematography,
best set design, best script and best musical score).
© James Travers 2002
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Next Roman Polanski film:
Oliver Twist (2005)
Film Synopsis
Warsaw, September 1939. Wladyslaw Szpilman is making a comfortable
living as a virtuoso pianist in Poland when the Nazis invade his country
and begin their systematic persecution of its Jewish population. Like
many of his race, Szpilman is forced to move with his family into an enclosed
ghetto, just as the mass deportations begin. The pianist only just
manages to avoid being deported himself, but the rest of his family are not
so fortunate. To survive, Szpilman is forced to become a manual worker
whilst enduring the humiliations that the occupying Nazis give out so freely
to the oppressed Polish Jews, whose numbers are rapidly thinning.
With the help of an old friend, Szpilman finds a place to hide, from which
he witnesses an uprising in the ghetto and then its brutal defeat.
Spotted by a neighbour, he is forced to abandon his present sanctuary and
is soon making a perilous journey across a devastated city. He finds
a safe refuge in a deserted building, but he is soon found by a German officer.
Recognising Szpilman's immense talent as a pianist, the latter decides to
shelter him until the occupation of the city is over. After the war,
the pianist regrets being unable to repay the kindness of the man to whom
he owes his life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.