IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
4040
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA few years after the events of Der Mann aus Marmor (1977), a journalist investigates Mateusz Birkut's son Maciek Tomczyk, now an activist leading a shipyard strike.A few years after the events of Der Mann aus Marmor (1977), a journalist investigates Mateusz Birkut's son Maciek Tomczyk, now an activist leading a shipyard strike.A few years after the events of Der Mann aus Marmor (1977), a journalist investigates Mateusz Birkut's son Maciek Tomczyk, now an activist leading a shipyard strike.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 6 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
Jerzy Borowczak
- Stanislaw J. Borowczak
- (as Stanislaw J. Borowczak)
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What you need to know about "Man of Iron":
1. Palme D'Or 1981
2.Wajda's sequel to "Man of Marble"
3.Sweet-a** performances from Poland's acting elite
****NOTE**** Ok, you really do have to have a Warsaw-pact historical/political background when approaching this film, because it's compactly interwoven into flashback sequences recalling various anti-commie events (worker's movements and so on). And yes, that's mustachioed Lech Walesa making a cameo. If you have no idea what the Solidarnost movement was read up before watching this. Of course, the emotional and thus universal element is present (Maciek and Agnieska's love, etc) but this is mostly a story of survival and determination in the face of corruption and political hostilities. Polish people took amazing steps against their government as early as the late 60s, and here we see the triumphant and climactic finish to these efforts. Wajda incorporates interesting documentary footage within the film to make it more effective and appealing to his audience.
See "Man of Iron" and feel nostalgia for the times when Eastern Europe saw change as a forthcoming and hopeful force. Classic.
1. Palme D'Or 1981
2.Wajda's sequel to "Man of Marble"
3.Sweet-a** performances from Poland's acting elite
****NOTE**** Ok, you really do have to have a Warsaw-pact historical/political background when approaching this film, because it's compactly interwoven into flashback sequences recalling various anti-commie events (worker's movements and so on). And yes, that's mustachioed Lech Walesa making a cameo. If you have no idea what the Solidarnost movement was read up before watching this. Of course, the emotional and thus universal element is present (Maciek and Agnieska's love, etc) but this is mostly a story of survival and determination in the face of corruption and political hostilities. Polish people took amazing steps against their government as early as the late 60s, and here we see the triumphant and climactic finish to these efforts. Wajda incorporates interesting documentary footage within the film to make it more effective and appealing to his audience.
See "Man of Iron" and feel nostalgia for the times when Eastern Europe saw change as a forthcoming and hopeful force. Classic.
This film movement, while in no way the most important film movement artistically, considerably helped morally support and unite the Poles into a decade long, almost nation-wide rebellion against the Communist party which bloomed into the freeing of the Polish state from Soviet rule. This was a catalyst for the break-up of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, the end of the cold war, and a new stability in Europe, and indeed the world. Only taking this into account can one watch "Czlowiek z Zelaza" and truly appreciate how powerful this film is.
A radio journalist sets out to discredit the leader of a strike at the Gdansk shipyard in 1980. Director Andrzej Wajda's 1981 film is a prize winner and one of the most celebrated Polish films of the late 20th century, whose screenplay by Aleksander Scibor-Rylski continues the stories of characters featured in the slightly better 'Man of Marble'. This 2 and a half hour film brings the story right up to date(with flashbacks to another strike in 1970) with the then current real life headlines in Poland of strikes,Solidarity and martial law, which seemed to go on for ever in the early 1980s. The central character Tomczyk has some similarities to Lech Walesa(who appears as himself in this film),in a film where art imitates life, or life imitates art. We had an Iron Lady so why shouldn't Poland have a Man of Iron?
There's just one thing that strikes me as odd and keeps me from giving the film ten stars. The wonderful protagonist of Man Of Marble, Agnieszka, is turned here into a stereotypical, boring wife/girlfriend. At a time of great historical importance , when issues she deeply cared about were the talk of Europe, all she finds time to discuss with a reporter who visits her at the detention center is romance. I'm having a hard time picturing the dedicated, driven and idealistic young person we know from Man Of Marble gasp unintelligibly about a child when her husband is on strike with Lech Walesa. A needless and surprising flaw in an otherwise great film.
A great movie about Poland's history containing also authentic material from the civil disorders. The movie handles also the viewpoint of individual in communist system. Screenplay is great.
Nine stars out of ten.
Nine stars out of ten.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis was the first, and so far the only, sequel to win the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. It was also the first Polish film to win this prize - the second was Roman Polanski's Der Pianist (2002) in 2002.
- Zitate
[to Maciek and Agnieszka at their wedding]
Lech Walesa: I trust you will be a democratic couple, so let me share these flowers democratically.
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 492.035 $
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 492.035 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 36 Min.(156 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1
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