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      The Scar

      1976 1h 52m Drama List
      86% Tomatometer 7 Reviews 68% Audience Score 500+ Ratings A party official (Franciszek Pieczka) meets resistance when trying to locate a chemical factory in his former 1970 Poland town. Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (7) Critics Reviews
      Noel Murray AV Club An eye-opening emphasis on the ramifications of Polish bureaucracy. Aug 30, 2006 Full Review Michael J. Casey Michael J. Cinema Not as competent and balanced as Kieślowski's later works, it does bear the fingerprints of someone interested in the human cost of political beliefs. Rated: 3/5 Jun 22, 2021 Full Review Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews A polished political savvy drama about the days leading up to the Solidarity Movement in Gdansk, during the time of a bleak Poland under Communist rule. Rated: B+ Mar 9, 2013 Full Review Fernando F. Croce CinePassion Overcast freshman feature Sep 25, 2009 Full Review Emanuel Levy EmanuelLevy.Com Kieslowski said it was a film of contradiction, compromise and hypocrisy, and indeed, through the story of the rise and fall of a big rural factory, he pits community against government, environment against industry, and ambition against responsibility. Rated: 5/5 Apr 25, 2006 Full Review Dan Jardine Cinemania Portrait of a filmmaker in chrysalis, Kieslowski's feature film debut is uneven, but engaging. Rated: 71/100 Nov 14, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (15) audience reviews
      Audience Member Kieslowski is on my top 10 list, so I try to get a hold of and watch all of his films. This one is his first full lenght after many shorts and documentaries. I chose the wrong day to check it out, that's for sure. I fell out from it quickly but I guess I catched the plot. Some guy is involved in building a huge factory in a poor, little city. This is met with enemies but also some friends. The balance of work and life is good, but I never cared much about the film. Forty year old Polish films about politics and infrastructure is not easy to cope with on a lazy Sunday. I did my best, but I failed. I dug some scenes, the treecutting and other wider shots done with great distance. There I was reminded of the lovely shots and scenes the man can pull off. Most of the time it felt like a very average film. The music was very cool and needs a mention. 4 out of 10 drinks for health. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Audience Member stark & dark debut feature hints of great things to come. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member After shooting documentaries for the first ten years of his career, Krzysztof Kieslowski decided it was time for a feature when he was already 35 years old (his first fiction film Personel was made for TV). If you know his work only from The Decalogue up, you will find some familiar elements, sure, but there will also be that feeling of something incomplete. His background in documentaries is too obvious in the way The Scar looks and feels, showing a filmmaker who was still very much in search for his cinematic angle. A work of social realism, it tells a story set in a small Polish city of Olechov, where local executives decide that building a great chemical complex should be enough to finally bring the desired progress. The project is secured in spite of some concerns by people about the effect that sort of enterprise could have on the natural resurses of the area. For the person in charge they choose Stephan Bednarz (Frantiseck Pieczka), by all acounts an honest man who has proved his abilities enough times to be given this duty. He and his wife have already lived in this town some time ago, with some unpleasent memories, wisely unexplained, threatening to come to the surface. The movie than goes to show the events up until the factory is finished, with many different points of view on just about every different aspect of the procedings. Man dealing with responsability and its consequences is a subject matter which didn't stop appearing in his work after this. In his later films, his hero becomes disillusioned cynic, playing God or spying on his neighbours. But here, he is still somewhat in full strenght. Stephan accepts his job with an honest belief he can make it work. We are a little dubious. It's not that he lacks ability; it's just that nobody has enough of it enough to pull something like this of. There are just too many differences of opinions, too many committiees and subcommittiees he needs to consult. Somewhere in between, there are people. At some point, they too will have something to say. Kieslowski here demonstrates the ability to handle crowds, those in stuffy poorly looking offices where every member faces another dead end day armed with a bottle of mineral water (the official drink of communist conferences), as well as the outdoor outbursts of joy when celebrating every deceptively big success. It is in those well structured scenes that the shortcomings of the picture lie. The complex schemes of socialist bureaucracy prevent simplicity we love so much in his work to come to surface. He was still to discover that he is not at his strongest when portraying people as part of a singular society, but as independent individuals who exist outside of those bounaries. The Scar is not a work which shows how great Kieslowski is yet to become. But as a separate piece, it has enough elements to be considered a necessary viewing for those who want to get familiar with the work of the director with more depth. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member The Scar This film is from Kino Video, which is a leader in international films. This is a polish film with English subtitles, about a chemical factory being but up and how it effects the community, and one honest man tries to get it all right. Reminds me of current day wal-mart's littering the countryside. All in all the movie is a 3 star show. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Another overtly political work by Kieslowski and a brilliant transition from documentary to fiction. It's yet another one of those films where you get a deeper understanding of what Polish politics must have been like; the double dealings, the pretense of some kind of negotiations with the public when decisions are already made, fiddling the books, and so on. Thoroughly entertaining. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member A film about executive who is sent to operate a large governmental factory, and becomes a slave of the situations. Everyone around makes careers and gets benefits, but he is the one who gets blamed for all the problems. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/29/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A party official (Franciszek Pieczka) meets resistance when trying to locate a chemical factory in his former 1970 Poland town.
      Director
      Krzysztof Kieslowski
      Screenwriter
      Romuald Karas, Krzysztof Kieslowski
      Production Co
      Zespól Filmowy "Oko", Film Polski
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      English
      Runtime
      1h 52m