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PRODUZIONE / FINANZIAMENTI Polonia

Il nuovo film di Jerzy Skolimowski tra i dieci progetti sostenuti dal Polish Film Institute

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- Anche l'animatrice nominata all'Oscar Dorota Kobiela, Łukasz Ronduda e Łukasz Grzegorzek hanno ricevuto sovvenzioni dal PISF

Il nuovo film di Jerzy Skolimowski tra i dieci progetti sostenuti dal Polish Film Institute
Il regista Jerzy Skolimowski, che ha ricevuto circa €700.000 di finanziamento per il suo nuovo progetto Baltazar

Questo articolo è disponibile in inglese.

While the team of experts assembled by the Polish Film Institute (PISF) debates the ways in which the industry can return to work in a safe and reasonable manner, the main funding body has also decided on the recipients of the first batch of grants for domestic productions for 2020. Some of these films, like Tak ma być (Let It Be) by Łukasz Grzegorzek, are international co-productions but with Poland as a majority co-producer.

Ten projects were supported with an overall sum of PLN 25.2 million (€5.8 million). Two of them are receiving subsidies on the basis of the decision of PISF director Radosław Śmigulski: Code Red/Imigranci (lit. "Code Red/Immigrants") by Dariusz Jabłoński (who also works as a producer: his recent credits include Oleh Sentsov’s Numbers [+leggi anche:
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intervista: Oleg Sentsov
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, shown at the 2020 Berlinale), staged by Apple Film; and Niepewność (lit. "Uncertainty") by Waldemar Szarek, produced by Fog Content Agency Sp z oo. The former project received PLN 2.5 million (€581,000) and the latter PLN 1.5 million (€348,000).

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Dorota Kobiela, who directed the Oscar-nominated feature-length animation Loving Vincent [+leggi anche:
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intervista: Dorota Kobiela
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with Hugh Welchman, received PLN 4 million (€930,000) for Chłopi (The Peasants) [+leggi anche:
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, which is being produced by Chłopi Sp z oo w organizacji. Kobiela is this time listed as the sole director of the animation based on a classic Polish novel from the 1900s, penned by Władysław Reymont and awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1924.

Veteran filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski (Deep End, Essential Killing [+leggi anche:
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intervista: Jerzy Skolimowski
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), who is currently staying in Sicily, received PLN 3 million (approximately €700,000) for a project entitled EO [+leggi anche:
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(working title: Baltazar), which may have connections with the 1966 Robert Bresson classic Au Hasard Balthazar. It is being staged by production outfit Skopia Film. In a 2018 interview with Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza, Skolimowski said that it was the only film that had “really moved” him.

Writer, director and art curator Łukasz Ronduda is set to make Wszystkie nasze strachy (lit. "All Our Fears") with a PISF grant of PLN 1.7 million (approximately €400,000). The feature is being produced by Serce. Both of his previous films revolved around edgy Polish artists – performer Oskar Dawicki (The Performer [+leggi anche:
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), and poet, filmmaker and performer Wojciech Bąkowski (A Heart of Love [+leggi anche:
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) – and they were both presented at International Film Festival Rotterdam. Ronduda’s third feature focuses on Daniel Rycharski, also an artist, who in his works examines religion, LGBT+ issues and iconography in rural Poland.

Also, as mentioned above, Łukasz Grzegorzek (Kamper [+leggi anche:
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and A Coach’s Daughter [+leggi anche:
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, both showcased at Karlovy Vary) is gearing up to make his third film, Let It Be, which will be produced by Koskino, and co-produced with the Czech Republic and possibly also Bulgaria. The PISF contribution is as high as PLN 1.5 million (€348,000), and the shoot is scheduled for summer 2020, assuming the pandemic allows cast and crew to safely return to film sets.

The company behind The Last Family [+leggi anche:
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and Corpus Christi [+leggi anche:
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intervista: Bartosz Bielenia
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, Aurum Film, will produce Backwards [+leggi anche:
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, the third directorial effort by Jacek Lusiński. This project will receive PLN 3 million, or circa €700,000. Also in the works is the new outing by Filip Bajon, whose previous film, The Butler [+leggi anche:
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, won the Silver Lions at the Polish Film Festival in 2019. He will helm Nauczyciel (lit. "The Teacher"), with another PLN 3 million (approximately €700,000) having now been added to the budget by the PISF. It is being staged by Studio Filmowe Kalejdoskop.

Last but not least, two feature debuts were also supported by Poland’s main funding body. One of these is the Koi Studio-produced Dangerous Men [+leggi anche:
intervista: Maciej Kawalski
scheda film
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by Maciej Kawalski, which, according to the published synopsis, will tell a crazy story featuring writer Joseph Conrad and set in a Polish mountain resort, Zakopane, in 1914. Meanwhile, Anna Maliszewska is preparing to shoot Deep Frozen Goods, produced by Metro Films. Each of these projects is to be granted PLN 2.5 million (€581,000).

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(Tradotto dall'inglese)

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