Un operaio di fabbrica acquista una macchina fotografica in occasione della nascita di suo figlio. Ma le autorità della ditta gli ordinano di realizzare documentari sul successo della fabbri... Leggi tuttoUn operaio di fabbrica acquista una macchina fotografica in occasione della nascita di suo figlio. Ma le autorità della ditta gli ordinano di realizzare documentari sul successo della fabbrica.Un operaio di fabbrica acquista una macchina fotografica in occasione della nascita di suo figlio. Ma le autorità della ditta gli ordinano di realizzare documentari sul successo della fabbrica.
- Premi
- 6 vittorie totali
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe film's opening scene and Irka's nightmare about a hawk killing a chicken are reminiscent of Ken Loach's Kes (1969) -- a film about a boy who takes to training a wild kestrel in order to escape his troubled life. Later, Filip can be seen reading a filmmaking text and turning to a section about Ken Loach and Kes (1969). This reference is twofold. First, Filip is clearly inspired by filmmakers like Loach in making social realist films about working-class people. Second, Irka is tormented by images mirroring Kes (1969) which represent her husband's budding obsession with this type of filmmaking.
- Citazioni
Piotrek Krawczyk: [looking at a roll of motion picture film] It's beautiful what you guys do. A person's no longer alive, yet she's still here. It's beautiful.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A lengyel film (1990)
Camera Buff is a wonderful story about a factory worker Filip (Jerzy Stuhr); a man who, in his thirties, begins to see life anew through the view finder of a small gauge movie camera. Originally purchased for "two months salary," which "pissed his wife off" to document his newborn daughter's first few steps, the 8 mm camera is quickly realized as something more useful than just a device for making home-movies. The narrative's tension is organized specifically around the reaction to the films of the institutional power structures and forces around Filip that essentially commissioned, financed, and instigated the films themselves along with Filip's newly discovered and unyielding passion for creating them as he sees fit.
If you view the Kino Video DVD release of this film, perhaps even more profoundly affecting than the feature as an augury of hope for the human race is the sixteen minute black and white documentary entitled Talking Heads in which Kielowski conducts helter-skleter a multitude of fifteen second interviews about "who you are" and "what you want" with Polish citizens, age zero to one-hundred, across all walks of life starting at the year 1979 with a little gurgling baby. In all, it's wonderful material and has me seeking out more Kieslowski.
- jkhuysmans0
- 1 apr 2008
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