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“In Darkness” Posted by on Feb 16, 2012 in Culture, Current News

In the last few decades, German and French filmmakers — reflecting, and in some cases, bravely advancing national attitudes — have examined the Holocaust with blunt candor and shades-of-gray maturity.

Polish director Agnieszka Holland’s beautifully made and profoundly responsible “In Darkness” represents a rare cinematic attempt to address the Poles’ unhappy participation in World War II.

“In Darkness” tells the World War II story of a dozen Jewish men, women and children who hide in the sewers of the former Polish city of Lvov.

Based on the actual experiences of Polish Jews, like her mentor Andrzej Wajda’s “Korczak” and Roman Polanski’s “The Pianist,” Holland’s film traces the evolving arrangement between an amoral Polish sewer worker and the dozen or so Jews he agrees to hide underground and feed — for a price — after the liquidation of the ghetto of Lvov (now Lviv, in Ukraine).

Its enormous historical value and exceptional artistic merits aside, “In Darkness” represents an opportunity to acknowledge and reduce the tension between Poles and Jews surrounding the Holocaust.

“There was a lot of hidden guilt among the Poles, and from the Jewish side a feeling of deep betrayal,” Holland said in a recent phone interview. “So the Jews were much angrier with the Poles than they were with the Germans.”

The lingering and unresolved ill will on both sides stemmed from a fundamental difference in perception: The Poles saw themselves as victims of Nazi brutality, and as occasional rescuers of the Jews. To most Jews, the Poles were collaborators or, at best, opportunists.

At some point in “In Darkness,” the compromised, erstwhile hero — sewer worker and thief Leopold Socha — fulfills every one of those roles.

“I cannot heal the relationship, but I can open people’s hearts and minds,” Holland said. “The moment when the anti-Semitism stops is when you see the human being in the Jew, and when the Jew can see the human being in the Pole, it’s a step forward.”

“In Darkness,” an Academy Award nominee for best foreign language film (along with Israeli director Joseph Cedar’s “Footnote”), opens in Bay Area theaters Feb. 24, two days before the Oscars show.

Holland’s father was Jewish, and she previously explored anti-Semitism, morality and survival in her amazing, epic 1990 film “Europa Europa.” So the 60-something director, whose résumé includes episodes of various HBO series, was well aware that she was re-entering dark, challenging territory.

“Anytime you go deep into this subject — I read a lot of documents new to me, because I wasn’t so familiar with this situation in Lvov — it’s a painful process,” she confided. “It’s in your dreams. It makes you depressed. Doing a movie like that influences your entire system.”

“In Darkness” opened in Poland in January to ticket sales that surprised Holland and her producers. Moreover, she reports, the audience was mostly young.

“For a long time the Poles didn’t want to face the truth about some parts of the truth, but in the last 10 years it changed quite quickly with the publication of some books,” Holland explained. “Some younger Polish historians are extremely honest about the subject. It worked out a lot of very painful emotions.”

The effect is most noticeable among the next generation, Holland says.

“When you are speaking to young Polish people today, they are really interested in the truth,” she declared. “Another side effect is many more of them see the Righteous Among the Nations as heroes. There was a time when they had to hide.”

“In Darkness” opens Feb. 24 at the Embarcadero in San Francisco, Albany Twin in Albany, Guild in Menlo Park, Century 5 in Pleasant Hill, Santana Row in San Jose and Regency in San Rafael. It opens March 3 at Camera 3 in San Jose.

Definitely worth a trip a movies!

Do następnego razu… (Till next time…)

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About the Author: Kasia

My name is Kasia Scontsas. I grew near Lublin, Poland and moved to Warsaw to study International Business. I have passion for languages: any languages! Currently I live in New Hampshire. I enjoy skiing, kayaking, biking and paddle boarding. My husband speaks a little Polish, but our daughters are fluent in it! I wanted to make sure that they can communicate with their Polish relatives in our native language. Teaching them Polish since they were born was the best thing I could have given them! I have been writing about learning Polish language and culture for Transparent Language’s Polish Blog since 2010.