Andrzej Zulawski
Birthday:
22 November 1940, Lwów, Lwowskie, Poland [now Lviv, Ukraine]
Born in Lvov, Ukraine; then he moved with his father Miroslaw Zulawski to Czechoslovakia and later to Poland. In the late 1950s, he studied cinema in France. In the 1960s, he was an assistant of the famous Polish film director Andrzej Wajda. His feature debut Trzecia czesc nocy (1971) was an adaptation of his father's novel. His second feature...
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Born in Lvov, Ukraine; then he moved with his father Miroslaw Zulawski to Czechoslovakia and later to Poland. In the late 1950s, he studied cinema in France. In the 1960s, he was an assistant of the famous Polish film director Andrzej Wajda. His feature debut Trzecia czesc nocy (1971) was an adaptation of his father's novel. His second feature Diabel (1972) was prohibited in Poland, and Zulawski went to France. After the success of his French debut L'important c'est d'aimer (1975) in 1975, he returned to Poland where he spent two years in making Na srebrnym globie (1988). The work on this film was brutally interrupted by the authorities. After that, Zulawski moved to France where became known for his highly artistic, controversial, and very violent films. Zulawski is well known for his ability to discover and "rediscover" actresses. Romy Schneider, Isabelle Adjani and Sophie Marceau played their best parts in his films. Show less «
I came from the French cinematic school of real thinking; and I believe that, with few exceptions, acting is a female occupation.
I came from the French cinematic school of real thinking; and I believe that, with few exceptions, acting is a female occupation.
I make the films about what is torturing me, and a woman serves here as a medium.
I make the films about what is torturing me, and a woman serves here as a medium.
I only want to film stories which have something excessive about them.
I only want to film stories which have something excessive about them.
To please the majority is the requirement of the Planet Cinema. As far as I'm concerned, I don't make a concession to viewers, these victims...Show more »
To please the majority is the requirement of the Planet Cinema. As far as I'm concerned, I don't make a concession to viewers, these victims of life, who think that a film is made only for their enjoyment, and who know nothing about their own existence. Show less «
Speaking profoundly, I love cinema, so I love to see it when I can, and I still love to do it when I can. But the energies are exactly the s...Show more »
Speaking profoundly, I love cinema, so I love to see it when I can, and I still love to do it when I can. But the energies are exactly the same as always. An English journalist told me that my film is an extremely radical film. I was listening with suspicion. I wondered, what does he mean by "radical"? It's chop, chop, chop, straightforward, punching the lines, etc. Maybe it is radical, I don't know. I enjoyed doing it, and I especially enjoyed working with the actors. I think they are all quite, quite fabulous. I also enjoyed fighting with the book by Gombrowicz. He was such a brilliant and highly intelligent and perverse guy. I was making a film that didn't attempt to be in a fight with the book-not destroying the book or pretending to destroy the book-but rather be faithful to the spirit of the book while not just flatly filming the book. Making a real film out of it was my goal.[2015] Show less «
...the only thing that I cannot sustain in cinema is boredom, this terrible boredom which assails European cinemas now, and these terrible f...Show more »
...the only thing that I cannot sustain in cinema is boredom, this terrible boredom which assails European cinemas now, and these terrible festivals. Go to Cannes, you'll die. [2015] Show less «
Please, what's important or necessary in cinema? Nothing. "Important," "necessary" - I can't understand these words. I do it because the boo...Show more »
Please, what's important or necessary in cinema? Nothing. "Important," "necessary" - I can't understand these words. I do it because the book is lovely and brilliant. I've liked the book for ages. I was very surprised to be offered the opportunity to film it. I would never think of it. And that's it. Now, is it important? No, I don't think so. What's important? Locarno [film festival]'s important? That car over there? No. Or Hollywood? No.[2015] Show less «
...the only progress in film nowadays is in technology. Technology leads the industry, or the industries. You have three solutions, and in b...Show more »
...the only progress in film nowadays is in technology. Technology leads the industry, or the industries. You have three solutions, and in between, once every five or six years, you can see a film which is a film, which is something to see, to hear, to get moved by in a way or another. I'm still very much against [contemporary cinema]. What can we do?[2015] Show less «
I was very happy not doing films for 15 years. Maybe it was the happiest period of my life. I was busy with really interesting things, like ...Show more »
I was very happy not doing films for 15 years. Maybe it was the happiest period of my life. I was busy with really interesting things, like living.[2015] Show less «
[on casting Cosmos (2015)] The young guy who is the lead, Jonathan Genet, I found in a theater in France. Not in Paris, but in the provinces...Show more »
[on casting Cosmos (2015)] The young guy who is the lead, Jonathan Genet, I found in a theater in France. Not in Paris, but in the provinces. He does a lot of theater, but he's practically unknown. I discovered him in the provinces, where I went because there are a lot of fantastically gifted and strange and unknown actors there, because the known ones are in Paris and they do resemble each other maybe not physically, but in the way they perform. He's a wild guy. He's fantastically interesting for me in a part that we cannot define really. It's ambiguous. I think that's very difficult too for him, to endorse this un-clarity, which is Gombrowicz. (...) The girl, Victória Guerra, was discovered by the producer. She's Portuguese, and I saw her in two not very convincing films, huge historical frescos, Linhas de Wellington (2012).... In the first one, she acted with John Malkovich. John told me: "Don't hesitate. Take her. Take her. She is a talent." And one listens to John Malkovich, who's the ham of hams, but very intelligent, totally bright, and so I listened. I did a test. The first shot of the movie was a shot in the mountains when she breaks down, to see if she can do it, and she could. So, she was in the film. (...) The two French actors from the old school, I knew them for years and years, and I admire them, especially Jean-François Balmer, the guy who does the older man. I think it's an incredibly brilliant performance with the language, with the French. He's amazing and I always saw him in the theater, and I always wanted one day to have the pleasure of working with him. He's a great actor. Sabine Azéma, who was the wife of Alain Resnais for 30 years, who I respected a lot, though strangely I never thought she was any good in his films. (...) Though in some light things where you have to be very quick and witty, she's very good. And she's very popular. For a producer, it's important. And she's a sweet person. We also had two Portuguese actors, which was easier, as we were shooting in Portugal. It was a small cast, a cast of nine.[2015] Show less «
[on how to describe the style of Cosmos (2015)] It's called Surrealism. It's an interesting interpretation, Romanticism pushed to the point ...Show more »
[on how to describe the style of Cosmos (2015)] It's called Surrealism. It's an interesting interpretation, Romanticism pushed to the point of absurdity, which is called Surrealism.[2015] Show less «
[on writing Cosmos (2015)] So the adaptation was something very, very difficult for me. I think I wrote the script three times in order to b...Show more »
[on writing Cosmos (2015)] So the adaptation was something very, very difficult for me. I think I wrote the script three times in order to be absolutely faithful to this mad spirit of Witold Gombrowicz. On the other hand, I didn't want to just film the book, but to make an independent and free film. (...) everything people say, the long monologues, the things Witold writes on his computer, this is in fact pure Gombrowicz, this is the text. But whether they go here or there or do this or that... this is an adaptation and a script has to be a script. Gombrowicz didn't give a fuck for any kind of logic. For instance, he allows himself to write that, okay, two people go to the garden, there are two, and suddenly one of them disappears. The one who stays never wonders what happened to the other. You cannot write a script this way. People will say: "What did they do with the other guy? Did they cut it? He got erased?" So there are certain simple rules we cannot avoid in writing scripts. Even Mel Brooks respects...the grammar of cinema.[2015] Show less «