Wajda tries too hard to detach himself from this personal drama and instead turns in what often feels like a piece of forensic archaeology.
Katyn (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:57
Fresh:52
Rotten:5
Average Rating:7.4/10
Consensus: Masterfully crafted by an experienced directorial hand, Katyn is a powerful, personal depiction of wartime tragedy.
Theatrical Release:19-06-2009
Synopsis:
Film Forum is proud to present Andrzej Wajda’s Katyn, the story he has waited a lifetime to tell: Katyn is the name of the forest where the Soviets secretly murdered 15,000 Polish officers,...
Film Forum is proud to present Andrzej Wajda’s Katyn, the story he has waited a lifetime to tell: Katyn is the name of the forest where the Soviets secretly murdered 15,000 Polish officers, intellectuals and professionals over a 3-day period in 1940 (during which a 14-year-old Wajda lost his own father). Stalin’s purpose was to destroy those elements of the population who would be most resistant to Soviet control following WWII. For decades the truth was obfuscated, with the Nazis often blamed for the atrocity. Half a century later, in 1990, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev admitted his nation’s responsibility. In this elegant production, Wajda recreates war-torn Poland and the stories of both the perpetrators and their victims. An Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Language Film in 2008, it was a huge hit in Poland, playing in nearly every cinema in the country, and selling more than 2.7 million tickets in a nation of only 39 million.
Katyn is the 82-year-old Wajda’s first film in five years. He is best known in the U.S. for his WWII trilogy -- A Generation (1954), Kanal (1957) and Ashes and Diamonds (1958) -- as well as for Man of Marble (1977), Man of Iron (1981) and Danton (1983). Wajda was awarded an Honorary Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2000 and was the subject of a month-long retrospective this past fall at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. --© Film Forum
Starring: Maja Ostaszewska, Artur Zmijewski, Andrzej Chyra, Danuta Stenka
Starring: Maja Ostaszewska, Artur Zmijewski, Andrzej Chyra, Danuta Stenka, Jan Englert, Magdalena Cielecka, Pawel Malaszynski
Director: Andrzej Wajda
Director: Andrzej Wajda
Screenwriter: Andrzej Wajda, Wladyslaw Pasikowski, Przemyslaw Nowakowski
Producer: Michal Kwiecinski
Composer: Krysztof Penderecki
Reviews for Katyn
Katyn is solidly, skilfully told. But away from these living-graveside scenes, Wajda’s own artistic bones seem too well-upholstered at 83.
If Polish, German and Russian sound roughly the same to you (and I can't tell them apart from Klingon) then you're in for two long and confusing hours, friendo.
Wajda has achieved something truly memorable: the film reminds you that cinema can be the preserver of the truth’s smallest details, when a run of excellent pictures can finally tell a story the world was waiting for.
This may not rank among his greatest masterpieces, but it’s exciting to see that Wajda still has a devastating, defiant work in him.
Though it would be hard to call it life-affirming. It is too riven with grief and horror for that, too aware of what Poland has suffered for it to be anything but a deeply sombre memorial.
Delivering an emotional punch to the gut in the final reel, this engaging account of an under-reported tragedy will remind you how cinema can still rise to the occasion and go beyond the empty bangs and flashes of tent pole releases.
This is an important film that packs a powerful emotional punch almost 60 years after the main events.
The principal success of Wajda’s stately, widescreen and exquisitely shot film lies in its sober attempt to mirror the fragmented truth of a genocide.
A touch hard to tell what's going on at times, the film comes into its own towards the end as it portrays with shocking candour the genocide that still reverberates in Eastern Europe to this day.
It is serious film-making of the most noble intent and it strenuously attacks the state ideologies that continue to legitimise war crimes.
Wajda employs a full range of sweeping shots and orchestral cues to ramp up the emotion, although he’s often guilty of sacrificing the intimacy of character for the grander narrative of history.
Superbly directed and powerfully emotional, this is a harrowing wartime drama that demands to be seen.
This powerful, heartfelt and important drama from one of the great names in world cinema deserves to be seen.
Impeccably shot and edited, this harrowing drama digs into the mystery of the murder of some 12,000 Polish officers in the early 1940s, which the Soviets falsely blamed on the Nazis. It's extremely grim, but well worth seeing.
Mainstream attempts at melodrama, sweeping crane shots and a Charlotte Gray gloss unbalance Wajda's desired mood.
Katyn is a solemn, troubling film that makes necessary demands on its audience.
With its mournful score, muted cinematography and restrained performances, this is a work of sober commemoration, though the climactic depiction of the mass killing is justifiably harrowing.
Perhaps because we Americans are used to seeing painful episodes schmaltzified by Hollywood, this sincere drama, easily the most sumptuous Polish film to date, feels generic.
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