Man of Marble

Man of Marble
Polish poster advertising the film
Directed byAndrzej Wajda
Written byAleksander Ścibor-Rylski
Starring
CinematographyEdward Kłosiński
Edited byHalina Prugar-Ketling
Music byAndrzej Korzyński
Release date
  • 25 February 1977 (1977-02-25)
Running time
165 minutes
CountryPoland
LanguagePolish

Man of Marble (Polish: Człowiek z marmuru) is a 1977 Polish film directed by Andrzej Wajda. It chronicles the fall from grace of a fictional heroic Polish bricklayer, Mateusz Birkut (played by Jerzy Radziwiłowicz), who became the Stakhanovite symbol of an over-achieving worker, in Nowa Huta, a new (real life) socialist city near Kraków. Agnieszka, played by Krystyna Janda in her first role, is a young filmmaker who is making her diploma film (a student graduation requirement) on Birkut, whose whereabouts seem to have been lost two decades later. The title refers to the propagandist marble statues made in Birkut's image.[1]

Man of Marble reflects director Wajda's emerging hostility to the Stalinist cultural establishment and its oppressive restrictions on artistic expression. The film's plot foretells the Lenin Shipyard strike of 1980 and the rise of the Solidarity Movement.[2]

  1. ^ Niemtz and Steinberg, 2016: “The film tells the story of a ‘model’ worker, bricklayer Mateusz Birkut, during the 1950s, shown through the investigative lens of a young female reporter, Agnieszka.”
  2. ^ Niemitz and Steinberg, 2016: "The mid-1970s also witnessed a change in Wajda's attitude towards the Stalinist establishment...his first 'anti-Stalinist' film...presciently anticipates the future development of the Solidarity union movement."