CAMERA BUFF
Retrospective
The factory worker Filip Mosz (Jerzy Stuhr in one of his most important roles) founds an amateur film club. His unfiltered depiction of the daily grind in his factory wins a prize, and is even shown on television. But his films upset the balance of his fellow human beings and public life, something for which he must now accept responsibility. At the same time, he begins to realise that as an artist he can describe the world only if he also trains the camera on his own self. Kieślowski's first international success is striking for its para-documentary style – crucially supported by Jerzy Stuhr’s performance – and its commitment to a truthful description of reality.
The factory worker Filip Mosz (Jerzy Stuhr in one of his most important roles) founds an amateur film club. His unfiltered depiction of the daily grind in his factory wins a prize, and is even shown on television. But his films upset the balance of his fellow human beings and public life, something for which he must now accept responsibility. At the same time, he begins to realise that as an artist he can describe the world only if he also trains the camera on his own self. Kieślowski's first international success is striking for its para-documentary style – crucially supported by Jerzy Stuhr’s performance – and its commitment to a truthful description of reality.