-
All our servers are currently overloaded. Please try again later or get our premium subscription.Get PremiumRefresh pageWe are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.Get PremiumWatch on MixDrop/MyStream
Dekalog - Season 1, Episode 08: Dekalog, osiem
Trailer'Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour'. A Polish-American researcher visits Warsaw and attends a lecture about ethics. Afterwards, she approaches Zofia, the lecturer, and says that she is the little Jewish girl whom Zofia refused to shelter during World War II. But Zofia has a very good reason for her apparent cowardice...Genre: DramaActors: Artur Barcis, Olgierd Lukaszewicz, Aleksander Bardini, Olaf Lubaszenko, Krystyna Janda, Piotr Machalica, Jan Tesarz, Stanislaw Gawlik, Krzysztof Kumor, Katarzyna Piwowarczyk, Maciej Szary, ...»Director: Krzysztof KieślowskiCountry: Germany, PolandDuration: 60 minQuality: HDRelease: 1989IMDb: 8.90 CommentsSort By- Newest
- Oldest
-
Actors of "Dekalog - Season 1"
More actors -
Critic Reviews of "Dekalog - Season 1"
New York Daily NewsApril 04, 2017Part 8 is a story that talks its way through a confrontation between an American translator of Polish writing and an elderly ethics professor with whom she shared a life-threatening moral dilemma during World War II.
LarsenOnFilmApril 04, 2017Not only is a previous episode directly referenced, but the entire film is about the danger of applying intellectual analysis to ethical situations. Doing so, Decalogue VIII suggests, often denies the basic humanity involved.
Filmcritic.comApril 04, 2017Sounds very powerful, but the female bonding and chatty trips through the past make this episode far too weepy and sentimental.
Spirituality and PracticeApril 04, 2017In this gripping dramatic treatment of "Thou shalt not bear false witness" Krzysztof Kieslowski examines the impact our words and deeds have upon others.
Austin ChronicleApril 05, 2017Decalogue Eight is among the more structurally interesting, self-reflexive entries.
Time OutApril 04, 2017One of the more schematic -- though no less fascinating, nor less acute -- of the series.