I've known about this movie for years, but I think after so many also telling me to see "Veronique", I thought "more style than substance".. First off, my unwritten rule is to try and do everything chronologically. For some reason, the poster always gave me the idea it was ... car chases. Or, some murder kinda movie. But after watching "Camera Buff" thanks to TCM (the only reason I have cable; although they charge 90% of the bill on the internet, and pennies for the party package), I thought I'd check this out, because it's only the second movie I've seen this year, but I liked both. The other one (Charles Burnett - Bless...), so thanks TCM again.
And @
Mr Minio replying to my last post, him being passionate about movies, Polish, and not into the mainstream shit, I had a feeling it was good. I might even give "Werckmeinster Harmonies" another chance, but I did not like the main character, telling his story for "big people like me".
So the movie... I love the little nuances of the director. Love it! Sprinkles of humor, usually something with ... complete irreverence, and I like it a lot. Sometimes I'd be thinking, "I wonder if anyone took what
I took?"
However, I was so into the second movie (I accidentally watched Red for 10 minutes) before putting on "White"... Of course, I misread the title! Sometimes even one IMDB line is too much, so I glance, and thought it had seen, "Polish immigrant plans to BRING back his wife" but it didn't matter.. At one point, I thought, "Please don't go there" (Hollywood romantic ending) and for a while he didn't. He gets back, but... the prison scene, ah...
Mikolaj! The first time he said it, I squeezed out a couple of tears... The moment I saw that actor, I was hooked in, and immediately hoped he would have a lot of screen time. 90% of characters who are "brooding men of a few words" are cool..... If you like Aki Kaurismaki (or even Cassavetes), you'd probably like this... I'm sure PTA did with his "Magnolia" ending. But he's after Altman. He's done at least three 'studies' of Altman's (Nashville, McCabe, Long Goodbye) without being too ... much. Just like the book to the movie ("There Will Be Blood").
At first I thought, "Maybe it is for a friend of his" but pretty soon I figured it was for Mikolaj, and then at the subway, he says, "Mikolaj!"... and I really felt a great friendship. I love the director being adventurous without being stupid. Surprised the gun (subtitle issue?) "Tear gas" was a blank. I thought even a blank killed. No matter - it's a movie. I thought it would have been funny if he were to ask Mikolaj to kill him.. After all, he got the money, which was a bit too much, just like "Blue" (one of the world's greatest composers), my only real issue with the director; using Hollywood mainstream gimmicks (yes, I'm talking to you, pal) with superlatives to maybe cause the audience to ... care more because it's not simply a great composer, but one of the greatest! As a musician/composer, I loved the scene where they collaborate, and thanks to ... a little brains, realizing there's so many things outside of updating homage/motifs (originality), when she would think on her feet about the song's arrangement, the movie's sound guy instantly substituted the horns for a violin or a piano, which is something I've been doing over the internet with orchestration/brass (pain in the ass online with people who don't speaking English, but amazing if it's done well)...
"The stove"... "You're lucky the stove wasn't on".... After the scuffle, the father keeps asking his son, "Should I turn on the stove", and the low-level criminal replies for him with, "Yes, it's cold".. Little things like that...
Not to harp on Mikolaj again, but the second he heard his fellow countryman's song, it's very cool.. I hardly ever met Americans while backpacking, and it seemed like people wanted to avoid each other's country. Especially a guy with money who I expected to maybe be disparaging, but I can imagine that feeling of needing to talk to someone who you can identify with in a strange land.
I love that the director
Kieslowski kept on with the theme of mild satirizing of the system.. Initially, a few mild lines about "communism", and now with "capitalism" and done in a good subtle way. No preachiness, just what it's like.
I must say when I saw Mikolaj described as a man of 40, I thought "old", and then realized I am 40 and old. But I just looked and
Janusz Gajos was actually about 53, and would like to see some of his best movies. Maybe someone knows?
In the second, very beginning, the main character from the previous movie is told to get out of the movie (by a gentleman ushering out through the doors).
Well, I wanted to take a break before watching the final one, "Rouge". Some judge secretly spying caught by the lead character....