Filip (film)
Filip | |
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Directed by | Michał Kwieciński |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Michał Sobociński |
Edited by | Nikodem Chabior |
Music by | Robert Koch |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | TVP Dystrybucja Kinowa |
Release date |
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Country | Poland |
Languages | |
Box office | $ 1 188 838[1] |
Filip is a 2023 Polish war drama film, directed by Michał Kwieciński. It is based on the semi-biographical novel of the same name by Leopold Tyrmand (Filip, 1961).
Plot
[edit]In 1943, Filip, a young Polish Jew, escapes the massacre of the Warsaw Ghetto. Disguised as a French Gentile, Filip works as a waiter in a restaurant in Frankfurt am Main, in an exclusive hotel, and carelessly enjoys all the charms of life surrounded by luxury, beautiful women, and friends from all over Europe. However, as the war begins to take a bloody toll on those closest to him, the intricately built world that surrounds him crumbles like a house of cards.
Cast
[edit]- Eryk Kulm Jr. as Filip
- Victor Meutelet as Pierre
- Caroline Hartig as Lisa
- Zoë Straub as Blanka
- Sandra Drzymalska as Marlena
- Maja Szopa as Sara
- Gabriel Raab as Baumuller
- Bohdan Graczyk as Eissler
- Werner Biermeier as Brutsch
- Ondrej Kraus as Bohumil
- Joseph Altamura as Francesco
- Tom van Kessel as Lucas
- Mateusz Rzeźniczak as Laszlo
- Karol Biskup as Artur
- Nicolas Przygoda as Ilie
- Philip Günsch as Jupp
- Robert Więckiewicz as Staszek
- Julian Świeżewski as Kazik
- Jürg Plüss as Gukst
- Nicolo Pasetti as Karl
- Christine Detmers as Elsa
- Anke Sabrina Beerman as Greta
- Zofia Cybul as Annemarie
- Ada Szczepaniak as Marta
- Hanna Śleszyńska as Diva
- Edyta Torhan as Filip's mother
- Robert Gonera as Filip's father
Reception
[edit]The film was first shown at the Gdynia Film Festival in September 2022, where it won the Silver Lion, and also awards to Michał Sobociński for cinematography and to Dariusz Krysiak for characterization.[2] The actor playing the lead role, Erik Kulm Jr. received the Zbyszek Cybulski Award for a young actor of outstanding individuality in December 2022.[3] The film was also presented at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival in 2023, which was its international premiere.[3][4] Filip also received the highest award (Platinum Gorget) on March 1, 2023 during the III Festival of National Culture "Pamięć i Tożsamość" in Warsaw.[5]
In his review, Jakub Majmurek appreciates the skill of the filmmakers in telling a full-blooded story in a modern style, as well as focusing, which is rare in Polish historical cinema, on the personal experience of a particular character rather than a grand narrative.[6] Majmurek emphasizes the biopolitical nature of the story. The Nazi authorities in the film are mainly interested in the sexual morality of German women, while Philip is "a Jew who, in the midst of the Holocaust, refuses to die" and decides to enjoy life.[3] Of the film's drawbacks, he mentions that at times it reverberates with misogynistic tones, and that it "lacks the closure that would have made a truly weighty and important work out of a good film offering a fresh look at a historical subject with an outstanding title role by Erik Kulm."[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Filip (2022)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "The Silent Twins wins the Golden Lions at the Polish Film Festival". Cineuropa - the best of european cinema. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
- ^ a b c ""Filip" z hollywoodzkim rozmachem – w kinach już od 3 marca! | Narodowe Centrum Kultury". | Narodowe Centrum Kultury (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-03-12.
- ^ Feb 08, Leslie Dinaberg Wed; 2023 | 8:30am (2023-02-08). "U.S. Premiere Films at Santa Barbara International Film Festival". The Santa Barbara Independent. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ S.A, Telewizja Polska. "Nagrody III Festiwalu Kultury Narodowej "Pamięć i Tożsamość" przyznane". fkn.tvp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-03-14.
- ^ a b "Z punktu widzenia żydowskiego kelnera / Film / dwutygodnik.com". www.dwutygodnik.com (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-03-14.
External links
[edit]- 2023 films
- 2023 war drama films
- 2020s French-language films
- 2020s German-language films
- 2020s Polish-language films
- Akson Studio films
- Yiddish-language films
- Holocaust films
- Polish war drama films
- Polish World War II films
- Films based on autobiographical novels
- Films based on Polish novels
- Films set in Frankfurt
- Films directed by Michał Kwieciński
- Films produced by Michał Kwieciński