Here are
some brief impressions on the one film I saw on Thursday, July 25th:
Purposefully crude in its construction, with abrupt cuts constantly attacking our senses, this late effort by director Zulawski is a redundant and indulgent exercise in repetition, fore-fronting many of the director’s leitmotivs from a slightly novel, but politically relevant perspective. There are no genre undertones here, no familiar dramatic crutches on which to rely, but merely a returning fascination for passionate love and the notion of duplicity, the depiction of which amply showcases the director’s knack for intricate long takes and hysterical over-acting. The result is something that feels entirely familiar, a universal tragedy that borders on pure madness, but with enough political undertones and deep symbolic power to grant it renewed relevance. Released in the mid-1990s, as Poland was emerging from nearly 50 years of Communist rule, Szamanka is one of Zulawski’s few “Polish films”. As such, it becomes simultaneously lesser and greater than a simple genre film, trading a certain universal appeal for a chance at specific, but credible social commentary. Articulated around the idea of still life, the film thus becomes a passionate and deep-seeded answer to the opportunistic rise of Catholicism and capitalism in post-Communist Poland, with its titular figure reminding us that the human soul is unchanging in its abandon to unfocused passions and its subsequent slavery to the power of influences.
The
narrative focuses on the torrid love affair between a young anthropologist
(Boguslaw Linda, from Man of Iron and Blind Chance) and a mysterious engineering
student (the enigmatic and beautiful Iwona Petry), who celebrate life and
humanity in a nearly constant sexual embrace. But while it borders on the
pornographic, the film does bear far deeper implications as to the nature of
human life itself, showing a reality that is both finite, but cyclical, a
reminder of both the idea of still life and the literal stillness of humanity in
the face of social transformation. Hence, the narrative also finds depth through
time, for as the young man probes the increasingly uncontrollable young woman,
so too does he probe history itself by studying the decaying corpse of the titular thaumaturge. By extending his influence through time, the figure of the shaman is thus "brought back to life", putting the past on a collision course with the future, with humanity remaining a still catalyst of unchecked passions, ready to be molded and transformed through the suggestion of "exalted" leaders. And in the end, the cycle is completed
with the return of ritual sacrifice, at once a reminder of our primordial
barbarity and the power of our passion, at once a reminder of death and of rebirth. Now, this
is perhaps a tad intangible as a synopsis, but so too does the film often prove intangible, proceeding from a certain expressionistic manner that seems to break down space and time
with equal ease.
Warsaw is a living still life.
And then,
there is the idea of still life, which infects the narrative in a very crude,
very aggressive way, first with the location of the action in the historical
city of Warsaw. Home to the biggest Jewish ghetto during WWII and a vast number
of similar war scars left opened by all the plaques and reminders scattered
around, Warsaw is living testimony to the finite nature of human life. Warsaw
is a living
still life, dead but stubbornly alive, not unlike the rotting shaman of the
title. The fascination with his corpse, at once an earthly remain and an
everlasting object of influence, then ties this idea of still life with that of
“rebirth” as part of a never-ending cycle. Hence, the reminders of life and death, which clutter the film in alternation. Sex is the most tangible signifier of life here, as it unites living bodies and passionate minds in one indivisible embrace. But sex constantly mingles with death, putting the everlasting nature of passion at odds with the reality of time and its lethal power. Bent over a piece of draped furniture in a dead still apartment full of antiques, poor Iwona seems to merge with the white shroud underneath her wriggling body, at once an active object of passion and a corpse to be. Actually, the look of her apartment seems to constantly remind us of the still life. First, with the shrouded antiques, earthly riches to be left behind in death, then with the scientific photographs of humans, who mock us with their simplistic depiction of our selves, then with the climactic act of cannibalism, which stands as a culmination not only of the narrative, but of Zulawski's entire work. At once a depiction of life, death and rebirth, this brutal and beautiful event also proves to be the ultimate depiction of passionate love. And as such, it provides a golden key to understanding all the intricacies of the director's philosophy. This might not make Szamanka a great film, but it sure makes it a relevant one, especially when it comes to understanding the Zulawskian mindset as a whole.
*** Purposefully disorienting, this intricate and deeply symbolic film finds relevance both in its political outlook on post-communist Poland and its exaltation of the director's take on passionate love.
*** Purposefully disorienting, this intricate and deeply symbolic film finds relevance both in its political outlook on post-communist Poland and its exaltation of the director's take on passionate love.