Bad Luck (Polish: Zezowate szczęście) is a 1960 Polish Tragicomedy film directed by Andrzej Munk. [1][2] The screenplay is based on Jerzy Stawiński’s novel Six Incarnations of Jan Piszczyk (1959).[3][4]
Bad Luck | |
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Directed by | Andrzej Munk |
Written by | Jerzy Stefan Stawiński |
Starring | Bogumił Kobiela |
Cinematography | Jerzy Lipman Krzysztof Winiewicz |
Edited by | Jadwiga Zajiček |
Production company | Kadr Film Studio |
Release date |
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Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | Poland |
Language | Polish |
Bad Luck was entered into the 1960 Cannes Film Festival.[5]
Bad Luck reflects the episodic source material by novelist Jerzy Stawiński from which it is adapted. Jan Piszczyk is petty bourgeois Jew and son of a Warsaw tailor. The story opens when the middle-aged Piszczyk is laid off from a job, and bemoans his fate. He provides a retrospective on his life in a series of flashbacks, spanning the history of Poland from the rise of fasict anti-Semitism during the 1920s to the postwar Stalinist period. Piszczyk emerges as a political and social chameleon, willing to accommodate himself to any situation. His opportunism propels him repeatedly into ludicrous and pathetic failures.
In 1988, the film Citizen Piszczyk was made, directed by Andrzej Kotkowski. Jerzy Stuhr played the main role.
Films by Andrzej Munk | |
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General |
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National libraries |
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