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La cicatrice

Original title: Blizna
  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
La cicatrice (1976)
When a political decision is made as to the location of a new large chemical factory, Stefan Bednarz is put in charge of it. This honest communist party man has to confront the local community opposing the construction.
Play trailer1:07
1 Video
8 Photos
Drama

When a political decision is made as to the location of a new large chemical factory, Stefan Bednarz is put in charge of it. This honest communist party man has to confront the local communi... Read allWhen a political decision is made as to the location of a new large chemical factory, Stefan Bednarz is put in charge of it. This honest communist party man has to confront the local community opposing the construction.When a political decision is made as to the location of a new large chemical factory, Stefan Bednarz is put in charge of it. This honest communist party man has to confront the local community opposing the construction.

  • Director
    • Krzysztof Kieslowski
  • Writers
    • Krzysztof Kieslowski
    • Romuald Karas
  • Stars
    • Franciszek Pieczka
    • Mariusz Dmochowski
    • Jerzy Stuhr
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Krzysztof Kieslowski
    • Writers
      • Krzysztof Kieslowski
      • Romuald Karas
    • Stars
      • Franciszek Pieczka
      • Mariusz Dmochowski
      • Jerzy Stuhr
    • 9User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:07
    Official Trailer

    Photos7

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Franciszek Pieczka
    Franciszek Pieczka
    • Stefan Bednarz
    Mariusz Dmochowski
    Mariusz Dmochowski
    • Boleslaw
    Jerzy Stuhr
    Jerzy Stuhr
    • Jurek
    Jan Skotnicki
    • Stanislaw Lech
    Stanislaw Igar
    Stanislaw Igar
    • Minister
    Stanislaw Michalski
    Stanislaw Michalski
    • Ministry Employee
    Michal Tarkowski
    Michal Tarkowski
    • Michal Galecki
    Andrzej Skupien
    • City Council Member
    Halina Winiarska
    Halina Winiarska
    • Stefan's Wife
    Joanna Orzeszkowska
    Joanna Orzeszkowska
    • Eva Bednarz
    Jadwiga Bryniarska
      Agnieszka Holland
      Agnieszka Holland
      • Hania
      • (as A. Holland)
      Malgorzata Lesniewska
      • Malgosia
      • (as M. Lesniewska)
      Asja Lamtiugina
      Asja Lamtiugina
      • Olecko Resident
      • (as A. Lamtiugina)
      Ryszard Bacciarelli
      Ryszard Bacciarelli
      • Architect
      • (as R. Bacciarelli)
      Franciszek Barfuss
        Bohdan Ejmont
        Bohdan Ejmont
        • Participant at the Chairman's Meeting
        • (as B. Ejmont)
        Henryk Hunko
        Henryk Hunko
        • Olecko Resident
        • (as H. Hunko)
        • Director
          • Krzysztof Kieslowski
        • Writers
          • Krzysztof Kieslowski
          • Romuald Karas
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews9

        6.62.3K
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        Featured reviews

        6huopa

        Slowly progressing

        I only got the idea of this movie on the second time I saw it. It is actually like a documentary of a fictious character (or who knows he didn't exist) living in a socialist Poland who is being commissioned to conduct a new chemical factory. The movie shows quite realistic portrait of a man who tries to keep his values in order in the middle of all corruption and chaos of different social movements of the time. The movie doesn't go into any character's side actually, but tries to display the difficulties of the system and how an individual is powerless in many ways.

        The storytelling is very slow and at times a bit jumpy. The music scenes of the movie, that are very rare, are quite bizarre, almost eerie.

        I cannot recommend the movie to anyone who tend to fall asleep in slow dramas, but those who like other Kieslowsky films or documentaries of socialism, this is an interesting flick.
        8ilpohirvonen

        In the name of progression, in spite of ecology

        Krzysztof Kieslowski became a highly appreciated art-house director in Europe when he made his TV-series about The Ten Commandments, "Dekalog" (1989). Later on, in the 1990's he directed The Double Life of Veronique and The Three Colours trilogy, which confirmed his position in the international art-house. As most filmmakers do so did he start by making documentaries, then he made two films for the Polish television and after that his first film for the big screen, Blizna (The Scar, 1976).

        Kieslowski himself called the film horrible. He criticized its screenplay and categorized the film as socialist realism. He probably saw something I can never be able to see; something that only the one who made the film could see. Blizna is a realistic film about a socialist society, but socialist realism was never even close to realism. It's full of that blind optimism which Stalin so idealized. But Kieslowski's film, Blizna, is incredibly pessimistic: it shows how socialism works, how it doesn't work, how it cannot work and how it's impossible for anyone to make a change in a society like that. However, one shouldn't feel that Kieslowski was a man cheering for individualism, market economy or economic liberalism. He always called himself unpolitical and criticism for the new, capitalist Poland can be seen in his later film Three Colors: White (1993).

        Blizna is a story about a corporation which decides to build a new factory in spite of ecology, or the people living in the area. They choose a man with a family to lead the project. Quickly he reveals to be a man who takes responsibility and tries to finish the project with honor. He soon starts to see the flaws of the project, where moral is only one defect. In his journey through Machiavellist politics he finds making a change incredibly difficult.

        The authorities of Poland didn't ban Blizna, but they treated it badly, and basically no one saw it until the producer of The Three Colours trilogy brought a bunch of films from Kieslowski's early career to the screen. Having seen Blizna today, it might have partly lost its grip, since it is tightly tied to its own time. The 1970's can be seen in just about everything: in the style, in the narrative, in the dialog and in the costumes. This isn't a bad thing, by any means, but Blizna certainly isn't a timeless classic. But what it is, is a good description of it's time. It shows how Poland worked in the 1970's under the socialist government; how it did not worked. Kieslowski said in his interview book, Kieslowski on Kieslowski by Danusia Stok, how sad it is that no one takes responsibility on what happened during the era -- not even today.

        Blizna is very pessimistic and has got inconsolable despair. It shows how impossible it was to make a change in Poland and how hopeless the era was. To put it briefly, it's a satirical description of the authorities of Poland. It is funny, political, pessimistic and very interesting for those who love Kieslowski, European art-house or are interested in history of the 20th century.
        8DukeEman

        The politicians are a joke!

        Kiewslowski's first film is an impressive study on a man who has been thrown in the deep end and put in charge of a Factory that the locals don't want. This is a very subtle and effective attack on the hypocritical Communist party.
        10FilmCriticLalitRao

        Poignant tale of a simple man trapped under a hard to follow system.

        Scar is a brave film which takes its time to settle nicely in viewers' minds.It starts in a highly official manner and later develops into a family tragedy.In Scar the best thing to watch is the manner in which all the elements of human weaknesses are portrayed.Helpless characters not being able to come out of their shell is an accepted trait of Kieslowski's films and it is very much evident in The Scar too as its leading player Bednarz is trapped from all sides.He can neither free himself from family pressures coming from his wife and daughter nor from his job under a communist regime.It would be wrong to judge this film's characters based on their actions but it would nevertheless not be wrong to claim that they are victims of unfortunate circumstances as they are being trapped under a system in which change is slow to come and consensus is really reached.For all those interested in Polish cinema they are some very good glimpses of 2 of the most outstanding figures of Polish cinema : a young Agnieszka Holland as an actress and Jerzy Stuhr as a young communist party worker.
        6boblipton

        Kieslowski May Not Have Liked This Movie, But I Did

        Engineer Franciszek Pieczka is deputed to take over the construction of a factory in a small city in Poland. Although there are problems with the plans, he sets to work with a will. Soon, however, he finds opposition from the locals whose lives are disrupted, or can't get jobs on the project. As the project haltingly advances, the opposition grows, and he finds himself in conflict with the Party and the unions.

        Krzysztof Kieslowski's first feature often has a documentary feel to it, but it's more of a character study. Pieczka is a technocrat, someone who knows how to get things done in terms of taking plans and allocating resources, but cannot factor in the personalities and conflicts of people into his equations. His relationship with his wife is a long-distance one; with his daughter, a criticized one. Although Kieslowski was later dissatisfied with the movie as an artifact of "social realism", and blamed the script, Pieczka's performance makes it very watchable.

        Related interests

        Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
        Drama

        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          First ever theatrical film directed by Krzysztof Kieslowski.
        • Quotes

          Stefan Bednarz: That's no way to live. You have to figure out what you want.

          Stefan's Daughter: Is your life the way to live? A new job and home and friends every five years? I don't know. You've left Mom on her own. Is that a way to live?

        • Connections
          Edited into La claque (1976)

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        FAQ15

        • How long is The Scar?Powered by Alexa

        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • June 18, 1997 (France)
        • Country of origin
          • Poland
        • Languages
          • Polish
          • German
        • Also known as
          • The Scar
        • Filming locations
          • Olecko, Warminsko-Mazurskie, Poland
        • Production companies
          • Przedsiebiorstwo Realizacji Filmów "Zespoly Filmowe"
          • Zespol Filmowy "Tor"
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 46m(106 min)
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.66 : 1

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