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marcin_kukuczka

A rejoint le mars 2004
Hi! My name is Martin and I live in the southern part of Poland where I was born in 1979. I was a teacher of English for 3 years in a primary school. In 2005 I graduated from the university of Wroclaw in Poland where I got my master thesis. At the moment, I am a teacher and a translator. My major hobbies are:
  • learning foreign languages (I speak English, German, Czech and a little Italian. I dream to learn French and Spanish),
  • travelling (I have visited most European countries and the Middle East),
  • movies.


The celebrities I like are:
  • James Caviezel,
  • Peter O'Toole,
  • Sian Phillips,
  • Maggie Smith,
  • Judi Dench,
  • William Hurt,
  • Valentina Cortese,
  • Monica Bellucci
  • Brendan Gleeson
  • Kevin Costner
  • Gerard Depardieu
  • Helen Mirren
  • Russel Crowe
  • Bruno Ganz
  • Juliane Kohler
  • Vanessa Redgrave
  • Sean Bean
  • Derek Jacobi


The late celebrities I like are:
  • Greta Garbo,
  • Romy Schneider,
  • Giulietta Masina,
  • Anna Magnani,
  • John Gilbert,
  • Richard Harris,
  • Richard Basehart,
  • Marcello Mastroianni,
  • Alec Guinness,
  • Annie Rosar,
  • Anthony Quinn,
  • Clarke Gable,
  • Vivien Leigh,
  • Claudette Colbert,
  • Ingrid Bergman.


My favorite directors are:
  • Franco Zeffirelli,
  • Federico Fellini,
  • Roberto Rossellini,
  • Luchino Visconti
  • Vittorio De Sica,
  • Michelangelo Antonioni (here Italians rule!)
others:
  • Ridley Scott,
  • Kevin Reynolds,
  • Robert Wise,
  • Cecil B DeMille,
  • Joseph L Mankiewicz,
  • Francois Truffaut,
  • Claude Sautet,
  • Mervyn LeRoy,
  • William Wyler,
  • Julien Duvivier,
  • Mel Gibson.


One of the genres I like most are epic films. The best ones for me are:
  • THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST
  • BEN HUR (both silent and sound)
  • QUO VADIS?
  • GLADIATOR
  • APOCALYPTO
  • KINGDOM OF HEAVEN
  • BRAVEHEART
  • CLEOPATRA (1934 and 1963)
  • THE SIGN OF THE CROSS
  • JESUS OF NAZARETH
  • THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
  • HELEN OF TROY


Therefore, I like Cecil B DeMille whom I consider a genius of biblical films.

I also love old classical dramas, the best one of all I consider QUEEN CHRISTINA by Rouben Mamoulian with Greta Garbo and John Gilbert.

A movie that had an impact on my life was BROTHER SUN SISTER MOON by Franco Zeffirelli.

Besides, I am a fan of some silent films. These are the ones I saw and liked very much:
  • FLESH AND THE DEVIL
  • THE SUNRISE
  • THE LAST LAUGH
  • BIG PARADE
  • A WOMAN OF AFFAIRS
  • THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE
  • THE KING OF KINGS
  • EROTIKON


Among psychological movies and specific interpretations of the world, Fellini is no. 1. Although I don't agree with his vision of the world, I love his movies from the 1950s, including LE NOTTI DI CABIRIA and like some of the 1960s and 1970s, like LA DOLCE VITA or GIULIETTA DEGLI SPIRITI. OTTO E MEZZO (8 1/2 is also worth consideration as a great work). But as far as this theme is concernced, I am very much interested in Italian Neorealism, resembled most in GERMANIA ANNO ZERO and ROMA CITTA APERTA.

I don't like science fiction movies and I don't watch many horrors, however some of them are worth consideration.
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Note de marcin_kukuczka
Hercule Poirot

Hercule Poirot

8,6
9
  • 24 juil. 2023
  • Discovering the Essence of Agatha Christie's Genius

    Encountering the films with the title character of Hercules Poirot, I must admit that I was not very much acknowledged with the stories. First, my wife and I enjoyed some long evening watching DEATH ON THE NILE, EVIL UNDER THE SUN filmed in our beloved island of Mallorca, and other films with Peter Ustinov in the main role. Great tension and some vivid moments that aroused our interest but the moment we discover David Suchet as the famous Belgian detective, I say: THIS IS IT, the character as penned by the author that all fans of detective stories know: AGATHA CHRISTIE.

    A lot of reviewers actually focused on different aspects of the films, their different strngths. I would like to emphasise solely the main character, Hercules Poirot and the absolutely fabulous portrayal by David Suchet without whom the films would be just pale and easily forgotten.

    A lot of different stories, lots of action, mystery, profound characters' development are just a few aspects that make the film with David Suchet a true embodiment of what the author meant and how she imagined the character. Mr Suchet supplies Poirot with charm and mystery, provides viewers with moments of doubt and disbelief and subtely brings us all into the world of his detection. No matter what episode you start with, you are soon into this specific world of suspense and mystery when you just wait to see what will happen and who is guilty of a crime not met before. His gestures, his voice, his facial expression, his typical moments of realizing when he suddenly knows the key to the riddle - simply awesome.

    That is why I heartily recommend anyone to see these films simply because when the performance is top notch, some little flaws might be forgiven.

    I.
    Tell the King the Sky Is Falling

    S1.E11Tell the King the Sky Is Falling

    La chute des aigles
    8,0
    8
  • 15 sept. 2022
  • Friends and Allies At War

    The Secret War

    S1.E12The Secret War

    La chute des aigles
    8,7
    9
  • 14 sept. 2022
  • Secret War, Secret Profits...

    Directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg and written by Ken Hughes, the episode SECRET WAR appears to bring the story slowly to an end game. As more a close-up than a holistic view, the producers and the director occur to wonderfully grasp viewers' interests on characters - dramas of some and glories of others, simply the roles change, just faces change among those who find themselves in this very unique position where they can hold the European history in their hands...

    The first scene of the episode sets the tone of the feeling that seems to remain throughout: the feeling that eagles are already sickened and weak. We see Kaiser Wilhelm (Barry Foster) among his counselors and advisers insisting that it is not him who wanted this war and aims at absolute victory for Germany. Soon, however, the story is set back in Russia where the revolutionary ideas seem to go wild among the people and being loudly cried in the Duma, the Russian government. The "holy man" a lunatic who delured the imperial court is already dead. However, there are two obstacles for the revolutionary Bolshevik monster to evolve: one is the tsar still alive and, seemingly, still in power and the other one is the fact that the pioneers of the revolution are not in Russia but in a faraway Switzerland. How to bring them back is a scheme, quite a plan of those whose secret war goes along secret profits and benefits.

    Some men seem to lose their power and the tsar no longer appears to represent the simple people, speak on their behalf. Asked to abdicate, in an emotionally unforgettable scene, he does not consent to that proposal saying a very memorable line that seems to resemble the way all Russian rulers have thought: "I am not used to being a sovereign who reigns but does not govern" I would ask a viewer to consider this scene in a more in-depth manner, as Nicholas leaves the train compartment, goes to a window to see his land and the camera makes him more and more distanced from us. Deeper and deeper, he disappears amidst the vast land covered with snow and hardened by frost.

    Another brilliant scene is the final moment which, actually, makes this only episode slightly longer. Lenin with all his comrades (among them is John Rhys Davies) arrive in Petrograd and receive a very warm welcome. Mind you the right depiction of people, fanatics who really looked up to these guys. A conclusion might be drawn that anything that brings even an illusion of change might bring about extreme devotion. And, historically, these people really smelled some wind of change due to these people. The episode is also famous for the moment when the news of the revolution comes to Lenin to Switzerland while he is on a boat enjoying his time amidst the wonderful nature.

    Brilliant scenes indeed but they are not the only strength of this episode. Above all, it is the psychology of the times, the main idea that lies behind most of the wars. It is embodied in the character of Peter Copley and his idea of Bolsheviks and the revolution which seemingly make the great war end. Ironically, he even presents the Bolsheviks as peacemakers to Kaiser. Indeed, any lie might find its believers as long as it is uttered with enough force and encouragement. It is historically true that the Germans were behind the rise of revolution in Russia. That is, so to say, the title secret war that breaks out amidst the corpses of the great war (1914-1918).

    If you skip some other episodes because the series seems to be too long, this one is a must-see, really.
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