d. Jerzy Skolimowski
c. Poland
y. 1964
description:
"In this drama, a budding ichthyologist studies at a university to try to avoid the draft. At the last moment he then relents and enlists. He has only a few hours to organize his personal life before he must undertake basic training. He goes to his apartment; there he finds his sick dog and has it put to sleep. He then attempts to make love to a housewife, not his own. Finally he goes to the store where his own wife works and discovers that she is really a streetwalker. The young man attempts to prepare himself for spending the next two years in the military as he walks toward the train station." (AMG)
IMDB... 7.7 (37)
_AMG... 3.0 / 5.0
size: 570MB
qlty: Sat
subs: no
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Identification Marks: None
Walkower
d. Jerzy Skolimowski
c. Poland
y. 1965
description:
"An aging boxer makes a scant living as a prizefighter in this drama. A former college buddy helps the fighter get an engineering job. Still the lure of the ring is strong, and when the fellow learns that his factory has a boxing team, he eagerly signs up. During a major fight, he ends up winning when his opponent is a no-show. Later the late fighter arrives and demands half of the prize money as he was paid not to show up. The protagonist refuses to share and the two end up duking it out in the ring. The aging fighter is no match for the opponent and is badly beaten." (AMG)
IMDB... 8.1 (37)
_AMG... 3.0 / 5.0
size: 530MB
qlty: ?
subs: no
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Hands Up!
d. Jerzy Skolimowski
c. Poland
y. 1967
description:
"Polish filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski directed Hands Up in 1967; he also wrote it, handled the art direction, and played a leading role. Skolimowski portrays Andrzej Leszcyzc, one of several doctors attending a medical school reunion in a sealed-up railway carriage. Between drinks, the disenchanted medicos ruminate over the effect that communism (particularly the Stalinist brand) has had on their profession. Never mind that Russia had just gone through an extensive de-Stalinization program; the Polish authorities found Skolimowski's message offensive, and banned Hands Up outright, compelling the director to seek out creative freedom in other countries. The film was not released until 1981-just in time for martial law to once more rear its ugly head in Poland." (AMG)
IMDB... 7.1 (44)
_AMG... 4.0 / 5.0
size: 700MB
qlty: ?
subs: no
Adopt me using...
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