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The film begins with a young woman reading from the Book of Revelation. It returns to the same scene again and at the end; in the meantime the film's narration, a strange, hallucinatory circle around the Institute for research into lice in Lwow, the only Polish academic institution the Nazis left open in Poland in the second world war, centring on Michal, the putative father of the young woman's son, Michal's family and the Resistance, circling back to what brought Michal, Marta and his parents to a supposedly safe place. It isn't safe, of course; Michal's mother, Marta and his son are soon killed by German cavalrymen. The film moves back to earlier betrayals and forward to the deaths of Michal, his family and most of the film's characters. We learn- and see- more of the feeding habits of lice than we ever knew before and than most of us would ever want to know and learn more of the resemblances between humans and lice. It might be Michal's fantasy as he suffers from typhus; it might be "reality"; whatever it is this is an astonishing and hallucinatory film. Early Polish films looked at the physical aspects of war; this is about the psychology of it and the psychological effects.
score 8/10
allenrogerj 5 August 2007
Reprint: https://www.imdb.com/review/rw1706561/ |
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