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 Director:
 Krzysztof Zanussi
 
 Screenplay:
 Krzysztof Zanussi
 
 Cinematographer:
 Sławomir Idziak
 
 Music:
 Wojciech Kilar
 Cast: 
                 Tadeusz Bradecki, Zofia Mrozowska, Małgorzata Zajączkowska, 
                Cezary Morawski, Witold Pyrkosz, Ewa Lejczak, Jan Jurewicz, Juliusz 
                Machulski, Jacek Strzemżalski, Edward Żebrowski, Krystyna Bigelmajer, 
                Kazimierz Borowiec, Leszek Cichy  
                Produced by: Film Studio TOR Language:Polish with English subtitles
 
 Runtime: 98 minutes
 
 Screening will be followed by a Q&A with the director Krzysztof 
                Zanussi.
 |     The chief character 
                  in ''The Constant Factor,'' a bracing and disturbing film by 
                  Krzysztof Zanussi, is a young Polish man with an affinity for 
                  mathematics. He has a sense of the world that is clear, practical, 
                  even elegant, but as a model it just won't work. ''What you 
                  can compute ceases to be a mystery,'' he declares near the end 
                  of the film, but by then he has been proven wrong. ''The Constant 
                  Factor'' follows this young man, Witold, into situations to 
                  which his brand of logic doesn't apply. Always, it points to 
                  death as the most illogical event of all. When Witold gets an 
                  industrial job, he finds himself quite unprepared for the constant 
                  chiseling of his superiors, an attitude that extends even to 
                  Witold's co-workers when they pad expense accounts. When his 
                  mother falls ill, he demands that she be moved out of a draft 
                  in the hospital, and winds up guaranteeing that she will be 
                  left in the draft, since he has offended the doctor he needed 
                  to bribe. 
 Played with both stubbornness and naivete by Tadeusz Bradecki, 
                  Witold becomes a touching figure, confounded time and again 
                  by his own straightforwardness. He expects things to be manageable, 
                  and they never are. As directed by Mr. Zanussi, ''The Constant 
                  Factor'' seems frequently to be on the verge of greatness, though 
                  its promise remains unfulfilled. Directed with a delicacy that 
                  contrasts sharply with the drabness of Witold's Poland, it has 
                  a light, graceful spirit that carries individual scenes, but 
                  fails to bind the film together. In the film's best scenes, 
                  Mr. Zanussi concentrates very effectively upon the spaces between 
                  his characters; sometimes he even does this literally. When 
                  Witold embraces his girlfriend, the camera slips along their 
                  silhouettes until it finds a ray of light shining between them. 
                  Earlier in the film, Witold is sent to India on business, where 
                  he meets an American who speaks casually about the Indians' 
                  mobility. ''If they work hard and save the money, they can go 
                  to New York just like we've come here,'' the American says. 
                  Then he insists to Witold that ''every man has got his own choice 
                  - just like you.'' ''No,'' Witold replies, and the discussion 
                  can go no further. In India, Witold watches the burning of a 
                  woman on a funeral pyre and is sickened and afraid. Later on, 
                  he watches his own mother die. ''The Constant Factor'' deals 
                  more bluntly and frighteningly with death than any film has 
                  lately, and this is perhaps its greatest strength. Its courage 
                  is impressive, though it remains somehow incomplete. ''The Constant 
                  Factor,'' which is very skilfully played by Mr. Bradecki and 
                  a sizable supporting cast, won the best-director prize at the 
                  Cannes Film Festival this (1980) year.
 (New York Times - October 9, 1980)
 
 MELBOURNE - online booking Classic Cinema Elsternwic 
                  BOOKING
  SYDNEY - online 
                  Booking Ritz Cinema Randwick BOOKING | Scenariusz 
                i reżyseria: Krzysztof Zanussi 
                
 Zdjęcia: Sławomir Idziak
 
 Muzyka: Wojciech Kilar
 
 Produkcja: Studio Filmowe Tor
 
 Obsada aktorska: Tadeusz Bradecki, Zofia Mrozowska, Małgorzata 
                Zajączkowska, Cezary Morawski, Witold Pyrkosz, Ewa Lejczak, Jan 
                Jurewicz, Juliusz Machulski, Jacek Strzemżalski, Edward Żebrowski, 
                Krystyna Bigelmajer, Kazimierz Borowiec, Leszek Cichy
  Nagrody:1980 - Cannes (MFF)-nagroda Jury
 1980 - Cannes (MFF)-nagroda Jury Ekumenicznego
 1980 - Gdynia (do 1986 Gdańsk) (Festiwal Polskich Filmów Fabularnych)-Nagroda 
                Specjalna Jury
 1980 - Tadeusz Bradecki Koszalin (KSF "Młodzi i Film")-nagroda 
                aktorska w wyniku plebiscytu publiczności
 1981 - Krzysztof Zanussi Kartagena (MFF)-nagroda za scenariusz
 1981 - Panama (MFF)-Wielka Nagroda
 
 Po projekcji filmu odbędzie się spotkanie z reżyserem
 Krzysztofem Zanussim
 Klasyk 
                polskiego kina psychologicznego. Witold jest młodym pracownikiem 
                biura wystaw zagranicznych, jest też synem zmarłego alpinisty, 
                który zginął w Himalajach. Wyjeżdża do Indii, gdzie odkrywa różne 
                ciemne interesy swego szefa i kolegów. Próbuje się temu przeciwstawić, 
                jednak bezskutecznie - wpada w konflikt z przełożonym i pozostałymi 
                pracownikami. Jest szykanowany, wreszcie traci pracę. Wcześniej 
                umiera mu matka i zmuszony jest do zarabiania myciem okien w biurach 
                i przy remontach kamienic. Interesuje się matematyką i chodzi 
                jako wolny słuchacz na wykłady. Podczas remontu jednej z kamienic 
                przypadkowo oderwany kawałek gruzu trafia przechodzącą dziewczynkę. 
                Tragiczny wypadek szokuje Witolda.... 
 Film surowy czasem przykry i bolesny w odkrywaniu prawdy o końcu 
                lat 70tych w PRL. Pokazuje stosunki międzyludzkie, cynizm i zużycie 
                wartości. Jest też ciekawym studium postępującej beznadziei. Film 
                nagradzany w 1980roku w Cannes, na festiwalu w Gdyni, w Koszalinie 
                (Młodzi i Film) a w 1981 w Panamie i Kartagenie. Trudny film, 
                ale budzi emocje i dyskusje.
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