The Pianist

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Trailer 1
Drama / Biography / War / Music
France / Poland / Germany / UK / USA, 2002, 150 min

Directed by:

Roman Polański

Based on:

Władysław Szpilman (book)

Screenplay:

Ronald Harwood

Cinematography:

Pawel Edelman

Composer:

Wojciech Kilar

Cast:

Adrien Brody, Emilia Fox, Michał Żebrowski, Ed Stoppard, Maureen Lipman, Frank Finlay, Jessica Kate Meyer, Wanja Mues, Richard Ridings, Anthony Milner (more)
(more professions)

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Oscar winner Adrien Brody stars in this epic true-life story of brilliant pianist and composer Wladyslaw Szpilman, an acclaimed musician who survived WWII with the help of a German officer. (official distributor synopsis)

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Trailer 1

Reviews (10)

Kaka 

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English Weaker than peak Spielberg. More artistically routine, much less sophisticated visually, and more audience-friendly. Of course, it is colorful, meaning less art, but not that we should complain about it. The Pianist is an honest film full of emotions and heart-wrenching scenes, and the overall message of the project is equally impressive. But it certainly won't capture your heart as much as Schindler's List. ()

NinadeL 

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English The Pianist is Polanski's triumphant return to domestic cinema after 40 years. It’s a gripping story from Wladyslaw Szpilman’s autobiography. Adrien Brody in the lead role truly became Szpilman, creating his character as a flesh-and-blood man who must be put through all the atrocities of war. However, everything else in the film is up to par with Brody's performance - the production design is very realistic, the other actors also fit very well into the overall collage of images of the past and there is nothing that could spoil the unique portrait of a broken man born through the pain and injustice of war. ()

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gudaulin 

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English It's easy to recognize on the Pianist that the film was directed by someone who personally experienced the horrors of war and the Holocaust. It is an exceptionally powerful and authentic testimony of the fate of Jews during World War II. Unlike Spielberg's celebrated Schindler's List, it is not calculated and polished, which is reflected in slightly lower ratings. Unlike Spielberg, Polanski chooses the form of a chamber drama of a single man, however, it is an exceptional, touching, and excellently acted film. Overall impression: 100%. ()

Othello 

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English The duty of every respected Jew to show people how horrible the Holocaust was, using the resources at that person's disposal, led Maestro Polanski to come to terms with the past with The Pianist. And it does indeed fulfill the agreed assignment. Throughout the film, the Nazis are disgusting, stupid, narrow-minded pigs, while the Jewish community suffers and despairs unjustly. What we all know, and anyone who doesn't know it or denies it is an asshole. Meanwhile, the story of Władysław Szpilman unfolds (the similarity to Vladek Spiegelman from the Maus comics purely coincidental?), a brilliant pianist who finds it increasingly difficult to escape deportation. He is actually behind one of the few innovations compared to other war films, and that is the beautiful piano solos that the main character creates (and playing the piano without being able to touch the keys is definitely one of the most beautiful scenes in the film). Otherwise, the film does not bring anything new, which would perhaps not have mattered so much and I might have reached five stars if it were not for the fact that English is spoken in Poland and I can never get over these things. ()

Lima 

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English I don't want to be too pathetic, but more films like this! So that people won’t forget the horrors that were committed, the horrors that the human race is capable of committing against itself, so that something like that doesn't happen again. And Adrien Brody, he blew me away! I completely lived his role with him, he was absolutely riveting and I'm so glad he got the Oscar. Just like Polanski, whose family was murdered by the Nazis and he knew very well what he was talking about – something clearly evident in this beautiful, haunting work. ()

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