Hands Up! Essential Skolimowski

7/22/11 to 8/25/11

Jerzy Skolimowski-poet, painter, actor, director, writer-was one of most inventive voices of the Polish New Wave. This series reveals the director's stylistic diversity-we feature early films that encapsulate the alienation and restlessness of young Eastern Europeans in the 1960s (Barrier, Walkover), the absurdist Hands Up! (which provoked the ire of the Polish censors in 1967), the satirical King Queen Knave (1972), the surrealist films of the 1970s (Deep End, The Shout), and Skolimowski's recent return to filmmaking with a tale of obsessive love, Four Nights with Anna, and his own take on the action-escape genre, Essential Killing (2010).

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Past Films

  • Moonlighting

    • Thursday, August 25 7 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (U.K., 1982). A group of illegal Polish workers in London (led by Jeremy Irons) find themselves stranded after a Solidarity crackdown in their own country. “One of the best films ever made about exile” (New York Times). “A sly, affecting parable of Ordinary Bolshevism” (Time). Also playing on August 19. (97 mins)

  • Essential Killing

    • Saturday, August 20 9 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland/Norway/Ireland/Hungary, 2010). Vincent Gallo is an escaped Taliban-like figure on the run in the wintry woods of Eastern Europe in Skolimowski's primal exercise in cinema-as-movement, both a nightmarish commentary on the “war on terror” and a formal allegory on the very idea of fear. “Intriguing and disturbing” (Guardian). Also playing on August 19. (83 mins)

  • Essential Killing

    • Friday, August 19 7 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland/Norway/Ireland/Hungary, 2010). Vincent Gallo is an escaped Taliban-like figure on the run in the wintry woods of Eastern Europe in Skolimowski's primal exercise in cinema-as-movement, both a nightmarish commentary on the “war on terror” and a formal allegory on the very idea of fear. “Intriguing and disturbing” (Guardian). Repeated on August 20. (83 mins)

  • Moonlighting

    • Friday, August 19 8:45 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (U.K., 1982). A group of illegal Polish workers in London (led by Jeremy Irons) find themselves stranded after a Solidarity crackdown in their own country. “One of the best films ever made about exile” (New York Times). “A sly, affecting parable of Ordinary Bolshevism” (Time). Repeated on August 25. (97 mins)

  • Hands Up!

    • Saturday, August 13 8:25 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland, 1967/1981). Skolimowski's cinematic provocation against politeness, conformity, and society was banned for over seventeen years by the Polish government before finally being released in 1981, with a newly shot prologue filmed in Beirut and London. “Startling in its originality, content, images, editing, and music” (Boleslaw Michalek). (76 mins)

  • Four Nights with Anna

    • Sunday, August 7 5 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland/France, 2008). A lonely crematorium worker, treated as a social outcast, spies on a just-as-lonely woman, but then begins to enter her home as she sleeps, in Skolimowski's mood-drenched, penetrating study of obsession and love. “An amazing film, hard, compact, and nonetheless funny” (Cahiers du Cinéma). Also playing on August 5. (87 mins)

  • Four Nights with Anna

    • Friday, August 5 7 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland/France, 2008). A lonely crematorium worker, treated as a social outcast, spies on a just-as-lonely woman, but then begins to enter her home as she sleeps, in Skolimowski's mood-drenched, penetrating study of obsession and love. “An amazing film, hard, compact, and nonetheless funny” (Cahiers du Cinéma). Repeated on August 7. (87 mins)

  • King Queen Knave

    • Friday, August 5 8:50 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Germany/U.S, 1972). A bumbling orphan winds up in the care of his industrialist uncle and attractive aunt, and promptly begins breaking all the worst taboos, in this clever satire on the kinks of the well-mannered rich. David Niven and Gina Lollobrigida anchor Skolimowski's adaptation of the famed Nabokov novel. (94 mins)

  • Barrier

    • Sunday, July 31 5 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland, 1966). Skolimowski discarded traditional narratives for this bracingly confrontational New Wave examination of youth and society, filled with surreal images and nightmarish situations. Music by legendary composer Krzysztof Komeda. “Paradoxically both romantic and hard as nails . . . a devastating allegory of the Polish state of mind” (Monthly Film Bulletin). (83 mins)

  • Walkover

    • Thursday, July 28 7 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland, 1966). A jaded part-time boxer and fulltime malcontent experiences all the wrong edges of the Polish socialist “miracle”-dirty streets, crumbling factories, and seedy boxing rings-in Skolimowski's technically innovative film, composed of only thirty-four long shots. With shorts The Menacing Eye, Little Hamlet, and Erotique. (90 mins)

  • Identification Marks: None

    • Sunday, July 24 7:30 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland, 1964). Skolimowski's debut assembled several of his student shorts into one feature-length narrative about the last “free” hours of a young man about to join the army. One of the key films of the Polish New Wave. (73 mins)

  • Deep End

    • Friday, July 22 7 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (Germany/U.K., 1970). London's swinging sixties gets a gothic makeover in this tale of an awkward teenager's crush on a mod coworker, set in a seedy public bath. Starring Jane Asher (Paul McCartney's ex-girlfriend), with music by Cat Stevens and Can. “The most brilliantly baleful British comedy of the era” (Guide to World Cinema). (90 mins)

  • The Shout

    • Friday, July 22 8:50 PM

    Jerzy Skolimowski (U.K., 1978). A young couple (John Hurt, Susannah York) find their polite English afternoons interrupted by the arrival of a psychotic, seductive stranger (Alan Bates). With a jarring electronic-music score and a soundtrack by Genesis. “An intense, haunting work” (Michel Ciment). (86 mins)