The Doll | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wojciech Has |
Written by | Wojciech Has |
Based on | The Doll by Bolesław Prus |
Starring | Beata Tyszkiewicz Mariusz Dmochowski Tadeusz Fijewski |
Cinematography | Stefan Matyjaszkiewicz |
Edited by | Zofia Dwornik |
Music by | Wojciech Kilar |
Production company | Wytwórnia Filmów Fabularnych (Łódź) |
Release date |
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Running time | 151 mins. |
Country | Poland |
Language | Polish |
The Doll (Polish: Lalka) is a 1968 Polish film directed by Wojciech Jerzy Has.
The film is an adaptation of the novel The Doll by Bolesław Prus,[1] which is regarded by many as one of the finest Polish novels ever written. The influence of Émile Zola is evident, and some have compared the novel to Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert; both were Prus's contemporaries. The movie, however, may be more compared to Stendhal's The Red and the Black.[citation needed]
The Doll constitutes a panorama of life in Warsaw between 1878 and 1879, and at the same time is a subtle story of three generations of Polish idealists, their psychological complications, their involvement in the history of the nineteenth century, social dramas, moral problems and the experience of tragic existence. At the same time this story describes the disintegration of social relationships and the growing separation of a society whose aristocratic elite spreads the models of vanity and idleness. In the bad air of a backward country, anti-Semitic ideas are born, valuable individuals meet obstacles on their way, and scoundrels are successful. [citation needed]
This poetic love story follows a nouveau riche merchant, Stanisław Wokulski (played by Mariusz Dmochowski), through a series of trials and tribulations occasioned by his obsessive passion for an aristocratic beauty, Izabela Łęcka (played by Beata Tyszkiewicz).[citation needed]