Screened as part of NZIFF 2018

Cold War 2018

Zimna wojna

Directed by Paweł Pawlikowski

Winner of the Cannes Best Director award, Paweł Pawlikowski (Ida) has crafted a brilliant, kaleidoscopic vision of 1950s Europe, bursting with music, dance and the turbulent love of two musicians caught between East and West.

Poland In French and Polish with English subtitles
89 minutes B&W / DCP

Rent

Producers

Tanya Seghatchian
,
Ewa Puszczyńska

Screenplay

Paweł Pawlikowski
,
Janusz Głowacki
,
Piotr Borkowski

Photography

Łukasz Żal

Editor

Jarosław Kamiński

Production designers

Katarzyna Sobańska
,
Marcel Slawiński

Costume designer

Aleksandra Staszko

Music

Marcin Masecki

With

Joanna Kulig (Zula)
,
Tomasz Kot (Wiktor)
,
Borys Szyc (Kaczmarek)
,
Agata Kulesza (Irena)
,
Cédric Kahn (Michel)
,
Jeanne Balibar (Juliette)

Festivals

Cannes (In Competition) 2018

Awards

Best Director, Cannes Film Festival 2018

Presented in association with

Metro

This dazzling Cannes winner from Paweł Pawlikowski, the director of Ida, feels like the perfect closing night choice: you don’t want such glorious filmmaking to end. Pawlikowski whisks his two fatally attracted lovers, a singer and a composer, through myriad, brilliantly evoked musical styles and settings either side of the Iron Curtain – from Stalin-era folk troupes to 1950s Paris jazz bars.

“Portraying a whirlwind, border-hopping amour fou in gorgeous black and white, Paweł Pawlikowski’s Cold War won him the Best Director prize. In post-war Poland, pianist composer Wiktor (Tomasz Kot) tours villages with his lover, music teacher Irena (Agata Kukezsa) in search of folk-based talent. At an audition, Zula (Joanna Kulig) cons her way into a duet with a more talented singer. Though Irena tells Wiktor that Zula is just out of prison for stabbing her father, he feels that ‘she has something’.

Soon she is a star… When the troupe performs in Berlin, Wiktor askes Zula to cross to the West with him; thereafter many borders are crossed, many lines of fate are broken… jealousies and betrayals flourish and die, but the two continue to attract and repel each other.

Much of the film is a thrillingly seductive musical, shot and edited with the rhythm of dance, but the surface whirl would not fascinate without the luminous presence of Joanna Kulig… The hopelessly unsuited couple are fictionalised versions of Pawlikowski’s parents, and through them we experience near equal disenchantment with socialist and capitalist mores. I loved it.” — Nick James, Sight & Sound