Two interesting if predictable episodes of the Decalogue
Written: Jan 22 '05 (Updated Jan 28 '06)
Product Rating:
Action Factor:
Suspense:
Pros: acting
Cons: uninteresting visually, predictable plots
The Bottom Line: The dilemma- and character-driven 1988 one-hour Polish tv programs (especially the third) do not strike me as being "masterpieces" as has been widely proclaimed.
Stephen_Murray's Full Review: Decalogue Vol. 1 - Parts I & II
Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie''s plot.
I am less awed than many by Polish writer/director Krzysztof Kieslowski's widely acclaimed "Three Colors" trilogy (though I like the perverse humor of Red). There is no way that I would try one of the marathon screenings of all ten hour-long parts of the "Decalogue," and I have (obviously!) been in no hurry to examine this work much hyped as "profound" and a "masterpiece" (or series of masterpieces). Just for starters, I think that "masterpiece" requires a higher degree of craft than the generally uninteresting visual compositions, flat acting, and slow pacing of Kieslowski's dramatization of violations of the Ten Commandments. (Didn't I just review The Bible? Yes, but that movie did not get to Moses and the famous tablets...)
The DVD of the first three of the ten parts (each of these in the 53-56-minute range in length, (co-written by Krzysztof Piesiewicz) of the Decalogue, with a general introduction by Roger Ebert (that seems to me to count as "plot-spoiling"), includes two stories in which I anticipated the ending "twists" before the mid-point. I didn't guess where the third one was going, because it did not seem to be anywhere or to be going anywhere. At the end this feeling was modified to the past tense: it did not go anywhere. The viewer knows a bit more about the relationships of the characters at the end, but they are not transformed by what occurred on the long night.
Leading characters in all ten episodes reside in a standard-issue high-rise apartment building in Warsaw of the late-1980s (before the Soviet Empire collapsed, but with mounting consumerism more on display than any of the incessant queuing for food and secret police surveillance of the regime) and have some connection to violations of commandments, given the variable quality and different cinematographers shooting each part, I'll comment on each separately.
I : What is Death?
The bestor at least the most engagingof the three episodes on the first Decalogue disk involves a university physics professor (Henryk Baranowski) and his son (Wojciech Klata) who place their faith in calculation and the ultra-calculator, a computer. The mother, who is off at some undisclosed location (I assumed in the West) communicates in cyberspace, and I don't really see that the computer addicts are putting the computer before God. They are treating the natural world as more predictable and calculable than it is (though one could argue that their equations do not include enough variables, and there are better demonstrations of chance than what the story uses).
The eager child (eager to use what is supposed to be his Christmas present, not just eager to use the computer) is played very effectively by Wojciech Klata.
II: The Doctor
The second episode is most interesting to me in showing a medical system in which physicians play God even more than in America. The title character (played gravely by Aleksander Bardini) is very unwilling to provide information that really is needed by the wife (Krystyna Janda) of a critically-ill patient unlikely to survive an operation. (Families are provided information on patients' condition only on Wednesdays between 2 and 5 pm! Dying patients are not told they are dying. ) I thought that the commandment involved was "Thou shalt not kill," but apparently it was ""Thou shalt not take the Lord's name in vain," though I did not notice either commandment being violated during the proceedings (to an ending I saw coming as soon as the wife explained the dilemma that required reliable professional assessment from the doctor. (I'd say this episode was, like the first, more about the difficulty of predicting outcomes with chance and/or multiple unknown variables and the physician is reluctant to play God, continually stressing that medical "miracles" happen. That is, he is not a determinist like the physics professor father in the first episode.)
The patient (husband) spends a lot of time being tortured by the dripping of a leaking pipe and there is also an extended sequence of a fly trying to climb a spoon to avoid drowning in a glass. More interesting than watching paint dry, but not enough more!
Conclusion
Having been in no rush to start with the Decalogue, I'm in no rush to see the other seven episodes (on two more DVDs). The influence of Ingmar Bergman's movies about the agonies (and game-playing) of confused adults is an obvious influence on the Decalogue (and color trilogy), but Bergman often (not always!) dramatized the dilemmas better. It seems to me that all three of these tv movies are excessively talky, though it takes some time in each episode to figure out who the characters are (and in the case of the third episode, the main characters remain opaque even at the end).
Much of each episode runs without background music.
Some admire the movies' "contemplative style." I think each of the stories could have been told more effectively in roughly half the running time (including showing the dynamics of the former couple's reunion, which is not much of a story, in the third). Some claim that, despite the source inspiration, the stories are not preachy. The first three seem somewhat preachy to me (despite the obscurity of the third) and certainly counter-revolutionary (to the sexual revolution).
The one DVD extra, Roger Ebert's appreciation for the Decalogue, includes clips from several of the episodes and gives away the ending of one not even on this disk (#6). Although providing some information about the plot of the second episode, I would not judge it as "plot-spoiling" (though, come to think of it, I guessed how the story would end from seeing the clip a few days before getting to the second story).
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I have written about the other parts of the Decalogue as follows:
The brilliant director Krzysztof Kieslowski (Three Colors: Blue/White/Red and The Double Life Of Veronique) brought together an acclaimed screenwriter...More at Buy.com Marketplaces
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