8 reviews
This film follows the life of a renowned physician who ends up a homeless vagrant with amnesia after losing his family and getting beaten up in an alley, all within a short span of time.
There isn't anything weak about this movie. The story feels very real and has touching moments without being superficial or cheesy. The story moves between an early 20th century Polish city and village life of the same era. The main character is easy to like and to relate to as he goes through his woes and tries to put his memories and life back together.
I recommend this film if you would like to watch a good, humane drama that doesn't disturb you in its darkest moment, builds an air of hope as it develops, and ends with a very satisfying sweet touch.
There isn't anything weak about this movie. The story feels very real and has touching moments without being superficial or cheesy. The story moves between an early 20th century Polish city and village life of the same era. The main character is easy to like and to relate to as he goes through his woes and tries to put his memories and life back together.
I recommend this film if you would like to watch a good, humane drama that doesn't disturb you in its darkest moment, builds an air of hope as it develops, and ends with a very satisfying sweet touch.
- karl-gutowski
- Oct 6, 2009
- Permalink
I loved this film. I saw it years ago while living in Romania. Here, in Spain, nobody has ever heard of it unfortunately. Afterwards I read the book, it's absolutely fantastic (there are two novels about this character - Znachor and Profesor Wilczur) and of course searched the web in order to find a way of purchasing the DVD with English or french subtitles as I don't understand at all polish... but by now there is no such edition. It's a pity, this movie is great. After so many years lots of details are almost gone from my memory, but I remember it as a beautiful film, great actors, great music... I'd like to highly recommend it to everybody, but as I already said, there's the problem of the language.
- sorinaoprean
- Jan 31, 2005
- Permalink
- andrew-133
- Jan 5, 2000
- Permalink
This film is excellent for its plot and message but an even better version of it is a black and white oldie made before the WWII!! This version follows the original plot which is what is so good about the movie and it keeps the viewer interested in how the story will unfold and who will win in the end; however, the black and white version is better because it is far more dramatic. Besides the timing, of filming the movie, being closer to a time when such a story could have taken place, the very format of old film-making gives it this strange old feel that this could have really happened. The black and white colors suits this story very well and the acting is excellent. I saw this film first when I was 10, then 12 and now at 27 I still love it.
it is simple to define it as one of the most important films of my youth. the performance - memorable Jerzy Binczycki-, the story, the moral lesson, the film as way to the book, all preserves the images of an admirable work. a doctor, his amnesia, his sufferance and the ways to be useful to a small community. the meet. and the truth , after decades, as price of long pain years. nothing surprising for the Polish cinema. but splendid for the small detail to be a fresh story today and demonstration of beautiful art. short, a film who must see it.
- Kirpianuscus
- Apr 3, 2017
- Permalink
- Cristi_Ciopron
- Apr 1, 2010
- Permalink
There are only two ways in which this movie is more than the original - 1 it is in color, 2 it has more unnecessary dialogue. However, good camerawork is better than colour. And the dialogues leave no space for actors to shine (they just don't stop). The sound design in the original was also better. Go watch the original because it deserves more credit than this imposture.
- Filip-Kolakowski
- Nov 10, 2019
- Permalink