Tripti Joshi (Editor)

The Wedding (1972 film)

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Genre
  
Drama

Duration
  

Language
  
Polish

7.2/10
IMDb

Director
  
Andrzej Wajda

Screenplay
  
Andrzej Kijowski

The Wedding (1972 film) movie poster

Writer
  
Stanislaw Wyspianski
,
Andrzej Kijowski

Release date
  
1972

Music director
  
Czeslaw Niemen, Stanislaw Radwan

Cast
  
Daniel Olbrychski
(Bridegroom),
Andrzej Lapicki
(Poet),
Czeslaw Niemen
(Chochol),
Wojciech Pszoniak
(Journalist),
Ewa Zietek
(Bride)

Similar movies
  
Directed by Andrzej Wajda, Poland movies, Dramas

Wesele (The Wedding) is a motion picture made in 1972 in Poland by Andrzej Wajda as an adaptation of a play by the same title written by Stanisław Wyspiański in 1901. Wajda also directed "Wesele" for the theatre.

Contents

The Wedding (1972 film) The Wedding 1972 film Wikipedia

"Wesele" is a defining work of Polish drama written at the turn of the 20th century. It describes the perils of the national drive toward self-determination after the Polish uprisings of November 1830 and January 1863, the result of the Partitions of Poland. It also refers to the Galician slaughter of 1846. The plot is set at the wedding of a member of Kraków intelligentsia (the Bridegroom, played by Daniel Olbrychski), and his peasant Bride (played by Ewa Ziętek). Their class-blurring union follows a fashionable trend among friends of the playwright from the modernist Young Poland movement.

The Wedding (1972 film) The Wedding Andrzej Wajda Film at Culturepl

The play by Wyspiański was based on a real-life event: the wedding of Lucjan Rydel at the St. Mary's Basilica in Kraków and his wedding reception in the village of Bronowice. It was inspired in part also by the modernist painting of Jacek Malczewski and Maksymilian Gierymski.

The Wedding (1972 film) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRHQQjfci0Y3ztWyG

Plot summary

A poet marries a peasant girl in Kraków. Their wedding reception follows. The celebration of the new marriage moves on from the city to the villager's house. In the rooms adjoining that of the wedding party, guests continually burst into arguments, make love, or simply rest from their merriment, dancing and feasting. Interspersed with the real guests are the well-known figures of Polish history and culture, who represent the guilty consciences of the characters. The two groups gradually begin a series of dialogues. The Poet (played by Andrzej Łapicki) is visited successively by the Black Knight, a symbol of the nation's past military glory; the Journalist (played by Wojciech Pszoniak), then by the court jester and conservative political sage Stańczyk; and the Ghost of Wernyhora (Marek Walczewski), a paradigm of leadership for Poland. Wernyhora presents the Host with a golden horn symbolizing the national mission, and calls the Polish people to a revolt. One of the farm hands is dispatched to sound the horn at each corner of Poland, but he loses the horn soon after.

Awards

  • Silver Seashell Award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival.
  • References

    The Wedding (1972 film) Wikipedia
    The Wedding (1972 film) IMDbThe Wedding (1972 film) Rotten TomatoesThe Wedding (1972 film) themoviedb.org