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KRZYSZTOF KIESLOWSKI - BIOGRAPHY
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Kzsysztof Kieslowski was born in 1941 and graduated from the State Theatrical and Film College in Lodz in 1969. His early films were documentaries and shorts and while still a student he made PHOTOGRAPH for Polish television.
His feature debut came in 1973 with PEDESTRIAN SUBWAY, which was followed in 1975 by PERSONNEL, a semi-documentary in which the hero has to choose whether to denounce a friend or lose his job. THE SCAR (1976) was followed by CAMERA BUFF, a story about an amateur cameraman whose love for his hobby causes trouble with the authorities. CAMERA BUFF won the Grand Prix at the 1979 Moscow Film Festival.
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CALMNESS (1976) was banned at the time by the Polish authorities. It focuses on a worker newly released from prison who vows to stay out of trouble but finds himself caught in a No Man's Land between the workers and the management of a factory. The satires BLIND CHANCE
and the television feature SHORT DAYS WORK, both made in 1981, were also banned at the time.
Kieslowski's collaborator on Dekalog was Krzysztof Piesiewicz, a lawyer who had previously worked with Kieslowski on the script for NO END, a film which attracted criticism in Poland for its uncompromising stance. After Dekalog, Kieslowski and Piesiewicz went on to write THE DOUBLE LIFE OF VERONIQUE which was an award-winner at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival and one of the most acclaimed films to be shown in competition. Kieslowski was made a Fellow of the British Film Institute in 1990 and has joined the ranks of Europe's most admired directors.
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