词条 | Zakazane piosenki |
释义 |
| name = Zakazane piosenki | image = Zakazane Piosenki - 2.jpg | image size = | border = | alt = The film still shows two young boys dressed in captured German military uniforms, with Polish national colours marked on the helmet of one of them, armed with bolt action rifles, passing a street under enemy fire during the Warsaw Uprising. | caption = Still from the film | director = Leonard Buczkowski | producer = | writer = Ludwik Starski | screenplay = Jan Fethke, Ludwik Starski | story = | narrator = | starring = | music = Roman Palester | cinematography = Adolf Forbert | editing = Róża Pstrokońska | studio = Film Polski | distributor = | released = | runtime = 92-95 min (two versions) | country = Poland | language = Polish | budget = | gross = }} Zakazane piosenki ({{IPA-pl|zakaˈzanɛ pjɔˈsɛnkʲi}}, Forbidden Songs) is a 1946 Polish musical film directed by Leonard Buczkowski. It was the first feature film to be created in Poland following the six years of World War II. The film, set during the German occupation of Warsaw during the war, tells the story of several inhabitants of the same tenement house.[1] Their stories are loosely tied together by a set of songs, both pre-war ballads popular during the war and war-time popular songs mocking German occupation (Siekiera, motyka). The film's premiere took place on 8 January 1947 in the newly reopened Palladium cinema in Warsaw. The film proved to be highly popular and more than 10.8 million people watched it in the following three years - twice the usual average attendance in post-war Poland.[2] In 1948 the film was re-edited and re-released in a new version, with more focus on Red Army's role as the liberator of Poland and the main ally of post-war Polish communist regime, as well as more grim outlook of the German occupation of Warsaw and German brutality in general.[2] Main differences:
However, as the farcical plot and all-familiar songs were mostly free of ideological subtexts, the film remained popular in the decades to come and some of its songs re-emerged in slightly modified form during the 1980s martial law and struggle against the Communist rule.[3] The film remains well-known and popular even in modern Poland,[2] being screened by the public Polish Television (TVP) on a regular basis. Both editions have been published on DVD in Poland, by the Propaganda label, first the 1947 one, as-is, and later the 1948 one, in a digitally restored version. References1. ^{{cite book | author =Ewa Mazierska | title =Masculinities in Polish, Czech and Slovak Cinema: Black Peters and Men of Marble | year =2010 | editor = | pages =41–43 | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =Berghahn Books | location =New York | isbn=978-1-84545-239-1 | url = | format = | accessdate = | oclc= 705885871 |id=LoC PN1995.9.M46 M34}} 2. ^1 2 {{cite book | author =Marek Haltof | title =Polish national cinema | year =2002 | editor = | pages =49–50 | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =Berghahn Books | location = | isbn=978-1-57181-276-6 | url = | format = | accessdate = }} 3. ^{{cite book | author =Sylwia D. Ejmont | others =University of Michigan (corporate author) | title =The troubadour takes the tram: Experience in Polish poetry and music | year =2008 | editor = | page =53 | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =ProQuest | location = | isbn=978-0-549-81488-7 | url = | format = | accessdate = }} 5 : 1946 films|Polish war films|Polish films|Polish-language films|Polish musical films |
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