Archives
Edition 2019
Films

Special Screenings - Special Screenings
Festivals and Awards:
Best Director Leopard - Locarno Film Festival
Crew:
Director: Andrzej Żulawski
Screenplay: Andrzej Żulawski
DOP: André Szankowski AIP-AFC
Production: Paulo Branco
Screenplay: Andrzej Żulawski
DOP: André Szankowski AIP-AFC
Production: Paulo Branco
Witold has just failed his law exams, and Fuchs has recently quit his job at a Parisian fashion label. Both are going to spend a few days in the countryside, and choose to stay at a so-called family inn. They are welcomed by a sparrow, hanged in the forest by a string. Then, an equally hanged piece of wood, and a series of strange signs on the ceiling, in the garden and in the woods. Could the next hanging be human?
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Cast:
Sabine Azéma, Jean-François Balmer, Jonathan Genet, Victoria Guerra -
Country:
France, Portugal -
Year:
2015 - 103 min Subtitles PT
Festivals and Awards:
Best Director Leopard - Locarno Film Festival
Crew:
Director: Andrzej Żulawski
Screenplay: Andrzej Żulawski
DOP: André Szankowski AIP-AFC
Production: Paulo Branco
Screenplay: Andrzej Żulawski
DOP: André Szankowski AIP-AFC
Production: Paulo Branco
Director
Andrzej Zulawski

Having written and directed all of his films, Andrzej Zulawski has created works inhabited by magnetic performances, combining destructive passions, violent Manichaeism and lyricism. He is particularly acclaimed for his great talent as a filmmaker and actors’s director, and has worked with Romy Schneider, Sophie Marceau, Isabelle Adjani, Francis Huster, Jacques Dutronc, Guillaume Canet, Lambert Wilson or Valerie Kaprisky, amongst many others.
He made his directorial debut in 1967 with a medium length film entitled The Story of Triumphant Love, and his first full length feature, The Third Part of the Night (1971) was widely acclaimed and earned many international prizes. As Zulawski’s career grew, he had difficulties with the Soviet regime, eventually facing censorship for his film The Devil (1972). He is known by films such as Mad Love (1985), based on The Idiot by Dostoïevski, My Great Nights Are More Beautiful Than Your Days (1989), adapted from Raphaële Billetdoux’s bestseller, or Fidelity (2000), freely inspired by “The Princess of Cleves” by Madame de La Fayette and produced by Paulo Branco.
He made his directorial debut in 1967 with a medium length film entitled The Story of Triumphant Love, and his first full length feature, The Third Part of the Night (1971) was widely acclaimed and earned many international prizes. As Zulawski’s career grew, he had difficulties with the Soviet regime, eventually facing censorship for his film The Devil (1972). He is known by films such as Mad Love (1985), based on The Idiot by Dostoïevski, My Great Nights Are More Beautiful Than Your Days (1989), adapted from Raphaële Billetdoux’s bestseller, or Fidelity (2000), freely inspired by “The Princess of Cleves” by Madame de La Fayette and produced by Paulo Branco.