An offspring of a very old German aristocratic family and a young Polish film director are both looking for traces of an SS general. During World War II, Ludolf von Alvensleben called Bubi was responsible for the killing of thousands of Poles and Russians, ordering executions or putting people to death himself. Today, the large family, still very proud of their noble origins, are trying to forget and conceal the Nazi blemishes in their family history. —astrafilm.ro
Stanisław Mucha, born May 3, 1970, in the Polish town of Nowy Targ, studied at Krakau’s national theatre academy “Ludwig Solski” from 1989 to 1992, graduated in dramatic art, and became a cast member and assistant director at Krakau’s national “Stary Teatr Helena Modrzejewska”. During the first half of the 1990s, Mucha starred in numerous film and stage productions. From 1995 to 2000, Mucha studied directing for film and TV at HFF “Konrad Wolf” in Babelsberg. His graduation film “Mit ‘Bubi’ heim ins Reich” (“Back Home to the Reich, with Bubi”, 2000) premiered in the Panorama programme of the 50th Berlinale. His following film, the documentary comedy “Absolut Warhola” (2001) that traces pop art icon Andy Warhol’s biographical roots in Slovakia won several awards. In his 2004 film “Die Mitte” (“The Center”) Mucha then went on a search for Europe’s geographical center.
“Reality Shock” (2005) then went from the middle of Europe to its very edge. In the humorous documentary film Mucha… read more