Sunday, February 17, 2019

‘COLD WAR’ COULD LEAD OSCAR TO VOTE AGAINST ITS OWN BEST FILM

Joanna Klug, the Polish actress who illuminates "Cold War"
By Dominique Paul Noth 

Is it possible that the film Oscar names best of the year February 24 simultaneously loses the best foreign film category? The academy may have set it up that way.

“Roma” is my personal choice for best film out the eight nominated (the others in order of likes  are Green Book, The Favourite, Bohemian Rhapsody, A Star Is Born,  Blackkklansman, Vice and Black Panther – and none come up to “Roma” in artistic worth).

Alfonso Cuarón is also my choice for best director and “Roma” is also nominated in the lead actress, supporting actress, screenplay, cinematography, sound mixing, sound editing and production design categories.

It is also, understandably, Mexico’s entry for best foreign language film and that is where the fun begins.

Because also nominated is an international festival favorite talked up by academy voters, Poland’s “Cold War.”  And – a rare honor for a foreign film -- it is also nominated for best director, Pawel Pawlikowski, against Cuarón.  Usually this category in terms of foreign recognition is reserved for the likes of Fellini, Truffaut and Ingmar Bergman.

Its cinematographer, Lukasz Zal, is also going directly against Cuarón in that category. That may reflect the movie industry’s fondness for excellent black and white photography, which is not a commercial favorite at the box office.

Pawlikowski, an intellectual who resists putting film-making first on his resume though previous films have also won awards, is the only case this year of a director nominated whose film is not nominated for best picture.

Voters may start overthinking this.  If “Roma” has a good chance at best picture and a very likely chance at best director, they may be tempted to give the foreign picture nod to “Cold War,” which despite the title renews my faith that the movies can deal intelligently with romance and not succumb to some kneejerk expectation of shallow audience-pleasing resolution. In any event, the Polish film deserves attention from moviegoers.

Like “Roma,” “Cold War” is in black and white and fictionalizes historical events from its director’s family.  From there the films stylistically part company.

While “Roma” creates panoramic views of Mexican society in the 1970s  and the social pressures in one year over the life of its domestic servant, played so winningly by Yalitza Aparicio, “Cold War” leap-frogs over 20 years (late 40s to 60s) in a series of powerful blackout scenes crossing the Iron Curtain.  The action moves from Poland to Paris to Yugoslavia to Poland and Paris and Poland again, plus some ports never specified.

The cinematography has more in common with John Ford than Cuarón. Every shot can be isolated as a marvelously composed frame while knit together to expose the casual and intense relationship of its central lovers.  When the camera stops to look at seemingly passing items, record them away for future reference.  Political factors are not emphasized but they hover in thought-inducing ways.

Joanna Klug and Tomasz Kot in "Cold War"
The faces in the romance are bewitching. The turbulent Zula is played by Joanna Klug, a luminous Polish actress who does her own singing and has brought comparison in looks and magnetism to Marilyn Monroe, largely because of an impulsive dance she does to “Rock Around the Clock” in one of her rebellious moods. The fact she is not nominated for best actress though the director is nominated has many in the movie industry shaking their heads.

Her lover, Wiktor, is a tall, gaunt Polish actor with haunting eyes, Tomasz Kot, playing a musician touring the Polish provinces in search of folk songs and young, raw country performers.  He is hunting a native musical purity that soon will get in the way of the wishes of his Soviet masters.

The plot centers at first on this Polish folk troupe, amusingly called Mazurek (a Polish cake) but based on a real folk troupe founded after World War II that toured the world, Mazowske.  Wiktor becomes enamored and beds a young singer with a troubled past.  When the troupe is corrupted to perform Stalinist anthems, he goes along though a colleague, played by Agata Kulesza whose expressive face conveys novels, is disturbed into departure.

There is also a cunning performance by Borys Szyc as the Soviet mole, also enamored of Zula and one of her later paramours.

When Wiktor decides to jump to the West, Zula gets cold feet.  Years later they hook up again in Paris but he has temperamentally changed from the stolid Pole she knew into a more worldly jazz musician.  Both have sexual dalliances, hers to both anger and punish him, though later she moves to save him from Soviet prison.  The audience sees all this somewhat after the events, through such things as Wiktor’s broken fingers and Zula’s drunken career as a pop singer. The movie explores a chain that neither can break. 

It is a fascinating journey without the artifice of violent events that most movies rely on and without explaining except in intense performances and meaningful shots the issues driving them apart or together.  Next to “Roma” it is my favorite film of the season being recognized by Oscar.  How much or how little it is recognized – well, that’s the challenge facing the academy voters.

Other current film reviews:
Mary Poppins Returns Updated with Oscar News

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs

Roma

Vice

The Favourite

The Wife and best actress Oscar race

Blackkklansman

Green Book

Bohemian Rhapsody

Black Panther

RBG On the Basis of Sex


About the author: Noth has been  a professional journalist since the 1960s, first as national, international and local news copy editor at The Milwaukee Journal, then as an editor for its original Green Sheet, also  for almost two decades the paper’s film and drama critic. He became the newspaper’s senior feature editor. He was tapped by the publishers of the combining Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for special projects and as first online news producer before voluntarily departing in the mid-1990s to run online news seminars and write on public affairs and Internet and consumer news. From 2002 to 2013 he ran the Milwaukee Labor Press as editor. It served as the Midwest’s largest home-delivered labor newspaper, with archives at milwaukeelabor.org.  In that role he won top awards yearly until the paper stopped publishing in 2013. His investigative pieces and extensive commentaries are now published by several news outlets as well as his DomsDomain dual culture and politics outlets.  He also reviews theater for Urban Milwaukee.




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