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Factory

Fabryka

Poland

1971

17 Min
Black and White
Polish
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Krzysztof Kieślowski

PROD Marcel Lozinski

DP Stanislaw Niedbalski

SOUND Małgorzata Jaworska

Synopsis

Like several other Kieślowski documentaries, Factory clearly serves as a metaphor of communist Poland. Made in 1970–the year of violent workers’ strikes in the Baltic ports–the film juxtaposes images of long managerial meetings and assembly-line workers at work at the Ursus tractor plant. Kieślowski crosscuts close-up shots of engineers and party functionaries with primarily long- and medium-shots of factory life. The dynamic factory sequences, portraying workers during their daily routines almost in the manner reminiscent of socialist realism, contrast the endless talk (“talking heads”) of the male-only factory administrators who gather in a smoke-filled conference room to discuss co-operations, production plans and supplies. The film ends with an image of new tractors leaving the factory, against all odds. The ending, writes Paul Coates, “is a deadpan epiphany: the pandemic production problems give the completion of anything a near-miraculous air”. —Kinoeye.org

Director

Original

Krzysztof Kieślowski

A towering figure of Eastern European cinema, Krzysztof Kieslowski was born in Warsaw, Poland, on June 27, 1941. His formative years, spent under the specters of Hitler and Stalin, were nomadic; his father suffered from tuberculosis, and the family traveled from one sanatorium to another. At the age of 16, Kieslowski entered Fireman’s Training College. His stay was short-lived, instilling a lifelong loathing of uniforms and disciplines. To avoid military service he returned to school, later attending the Warsaw College for Theatre Technicians. In 1965, after several previous rejections, he was finally accepted into the famed Lodz Film School — the same institution which launched the careers of Roman Polanski, Andrzej Wadja, Jerzy Skolimowski, and Krzysztof Zanussi — and made his first short feature, Tramwaj (The Tram), the following year.

The communist-controlled Poland of the 1960s and 1970s was a nation of great political unrest. Consequently, film emerged as a crucial means… read more

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Displaying 4 of 5 wall posts.
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fleurare

30Jan12

Although it poses good thought, it is surprisingly uneffective in comparison to Urzad and Talking Heads, mostly because it focuses too much on excessive dialogue.

  • Picture of Neuron

    Neuron

    13Feb12

    I don't believe the purpose of this short follows the same vein of Urzad and Talking heads. This one gives us a window into what the middle of the pie is really going through in a way that can't be achieved by following a few short powerful lines and scenes.

Picture of William Low

William Low

16Jan12

sums up all the problems and intrigues brilliantly by just using dialogues

Picture of Judicial Joe

Judicial Joe

25Nov11

Excellent commentary on the Communist bourgeoisie in 1970s Poland, who bicker in the boardroom while the strong, silent, masculine workers keep the factory running without need for debate. Boffo Eisenstein-style editing and camerawork, all in all a very good short worth using in class to show the influence of Soviet montage on future generations of filmmakers.

Picture of Black Irish

Black Irish

24Nov11

Having seen some of his early films recently, this sticks in my mind the most so far. We see workers, but the focus is mainly on the management as they attempt to assign blame to one thing or another while their superior continually berates them and demands answers. Focusing strictly on the faces we see every gesture, every movement. We feel the discomfort. It's Dreyer's Jeanne d'Arc in a Polish tractor factory.

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