The Decalogue (1989) Episode 5
The Decalogue 5
Spoilers occur about the ending, this review is intended for those who have already watched the film.
Summary:
Takes place during a day in Warszawa. Piotr, a lawyer fresh out of school has just finished his studies and is just starting out his career. A taxi driver washes his car. A young man named Jacek from the provinces is aimlessly drifting around the streets. Under strange circumstances, all three of them will get to know each other. The young man is restless and sullen, and it seems like he easily gets in a bad mood. At one point he takes a taxi, requests to be driven to a remote area, and murders the driver for no apparent reason. It seems Jacek is almost asking to be caught, because he leaves his finger prints all over the crime scene.
Piotr takes on the job as Jacek's attorney and becomes aware that the young lad never recovered from his sister's death, and that Jacek feels partly responsible for her passing. He is not yet 20-years-old, but the judge shows no mercy and sentences Jacek to the death penalty. A pardon is refused, the young man is to be hanged. The lawyer believes a new crime is being added to the first crime by killing Jacek. Piotr is convinced that crimes are not prevented by using the death penalty.
Analysis and interpretation:
Favorite quote: “Since the days of Cain, no punishment has proved to be an adequate deterrent”
The main theme is the death penalty, and whether it should be used. Initially I thought the lawyer was the older version of the younger man, turns out I was wrong about that. The scenes of the lawyer are intercut with Jacek’s journey, so there is a feeling of a consequence to everything Jacek does.
Jacek is alone in the city and seems alienated from his surroundings, the sad classical music adds to this feeling. He appears to have not had enough love during his childhood, he loved his little sister, and Jacek was her favorite too. Perhaps the parents were uncaring. We notice that Jacek's mother did not have a kind word to say to him before the hanging. She indirectly acknowledges that he should be hanged, and hanging is the price he must pay.
As blogger Deciphering The Decalogue writes: Jacek is a person who has been emotionally stunted possibly from abandonment, and was likely not taught during his upbringing how to control the evil inside him.
This however does not excuse what he has done, but merely is a factor in his behavior. We can empathize with his isolation and possible lack of parental guidance.
Piotr, the defense lawyer, in a way steps in and becomes a father figure for Jacek in the absence of his parents. Jacek senses the warmth Piotr is offering, and wholeheartedly accepts it with open arms. Perhaps it’s the first time the boy has ever felt a father's love.
The commandment, you shall not murder, was originally an attempt to reduce acts of revenge. But what is the death penalty, is it just a modern day revenge action?
Kieslowski: "The film was an accusation against violence. To cause somebody’s death is the highest form of violence, you can imagine; the death penalty is to cause someone’s death. In that way there is a link between violence and the death penalty, and the film is against the death sentence as a kind of violence."
The director makes us feel empathy for the killer, so we are on Piotr's side, and against the executioners. We wonder, as Piotr does, is there not an alternative for Jacek, can he be cured over time? Or is Piotr simply too forgiving and soft?
As SJHoneywell notes in his review, why does the state have rights to murder, that the individual does not?
andrewsidea interprets the final moments of the episode: “a long shot across a beautiful field at the end of which we see an odd light. The beauty we see here juxtaposes both with the scene before it and the frame that follows it when the camera pans left to capture Piotr, sobbing and screaming from his car, “I abhor it!” So far the episodes in The Decalogue have always contained at least an element of hope, which seems to be what the light in the field implies. Earlier, Jacek describes the death of his younger sister as having taken place in a field, perhaps now symbolic of Jacek’s earlier and better life. The steadfast light shining on the opposite side of the field is a distant beauty, but beauty nonetheless. It contrasts with the darkness of the rest of the film and is invisible to the characters but visible to the viewers. Though Kieslowski allows those within the film to despair, he suggests to the audience that despair isn’t the only option.”
Kieslowski: "Actually there is not much to say about the story, because we don’t know why he kills the taxi driver."
Kieslowski: "We are in Warszawa. The city and the surrounding are represented in a particular way. The cameraman on this film, Slawek Idziak, utilized specific filters. Green filters, so the films colour is more green than otherwise. Green is presumed to be the colour of spring, the colour of hope, but if you put green filters on the camera, the world seems more brutal, bleak, and empty. Everything was recorded with filters, it was the camera man’s idea."
Verdict:
A powerful and violent episode, that stays with you. The performances are also very good. We feel we are in Jacek’s shoes, like when we followed Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver (1976), or The Jackal in The Day of the Jackal (1973).
The atmosphere and look of episode 5 creates a distorted reality that reflects Jacek’s bleak and empty life. The filters on the camera foreshadow Kieslowski’s The Double Life of Veronique (1991).
The script presents the good and the bad sides of two of the main characters, whom are not simply evil, or only good. There are no easy explanations to what makes these characters do what they do, and we must draw our own conclusions. Unlike artificial and exaggerated violence in big action movies, The Decalogue Episode 5 is very realistic and uncomfortable in its depiction of a crime, and maybe this is why it is more frightening, because it could happen in our neighborhood. Episode 5 was also released in a longer version in cinemas.
Next time, I'll look at Episode 6. Readers of this review, any thoughts on Episode 5?
Quotations:
Kieslowski on Kieslowski / Danusia Stok
I can count to ten / SJHoneywell
andrewsidea
Deciphering The Decalogue - Episode 5- Thou Shalt Not Kill
Album review: American IV: The Man Comes Around - Johnny Cash (2002)
My favorite Johnny Cash album, and my favorite of the American Recording LPs, a strong, haunting, essential record that you can listen to all the way through, most of the tracks are noteworthy. An album that also holds up well to repeat listening in my opinion.
By the time of American 4, there was a poignant fragility to his singing, compared to the defiant strength in his voice on American 2: Unchained (1996). But the cracks and slurs and Cash wearing his heart on his sleeve add to its ragged grandeur.
There is a distinct mood that death is in the air. It could be interpreted as a goodbye letter, to both his wife and family as well as his fans. Particularly the last track, We’ll Meet Again, a song popular with soldiers going off to fight in World War II, here turned into a bittersweet “see you later” to his loved ones. Cash died in 2003, a year after the album was released.
On songs such as Hurt by Nine Inch Nails, and I Hung My Head by Sting, Cash’s cover versions arguably surpassed the original recordings.
Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor admitted that he was initially "flattered" but worried that "the idea [of Cash covering "Hurt"] sounded a bit gimmicky," but when he heard the song and saw the video for the first time, Reznor said he was deeply moved and found Cash's cover beautiful and meaningful.
Johnny Cash, linear notes, from album sleeve:
“The Man Comes Around, I spent more time on this song than any I ever wrote. It’s based, loosely, on the book of revelation, with a couple of lines, or a chorus, from the other bible sources. (…) Revelation by its mere interpretation says that something is revealed. I wish it were. The more I dug into the book the more I came to realize why it’s such a puzzle, even to Theologians”
About the track The Man Comes Around: The song was inspired by a dream Johnny had about visiting the Queen of England. “I had a dream that I was in Buckingham Palace (…) The Queen said: Johnny Cash, you’re like a thorn in a whirlwind. And I woke up and I thought, that’s got to be a meaningful dream. (…) and finally I thought, maybe it’s biblical, so I got a Concordance down, a chain reference system of the Bible, and found it in Job. My grandfather was a minister and I was brought up reading the scriptures, so I guess I did have it in there somewhere!”
Although a lot of the songs on his forth American album were about suffering and loss – “I don’t know if it’s because of my age. But the songs just keep coming round about pain and death so I keep singing about it”. Its theme, Cash said, was “the strength of the human spirit”
As Johnny later told Kurt Loder for MTV: I wouldn’t let anyone influence me into thinking I was doing the wrong thing by singing about death, hell and drugs. Cause I’ve always done that. And I always will.
A week after his wife June Carter died, in May 2003, following complications after heart surgery, Johnny Cash went back into the studio to make more music. Johnny Cash: "Some people said 'You’re crazy, you shouldn’t do this that soon', and I said. Tell me why I shouldn’t. I should do that, this soon. I have to. I have to do that this soon. And I did. I did it that soon. June told me once. If something happens to me that I can’t work, you keep working. You have to work. She knows me that I have to work."
Rick Rubin: "Sometimes you’ll hear albums where they’re about a sound or a mood or a style of playing, but the albums Johnny made with me are all personal, heartfelt songs that have some serious weight to them.”
With the song Hurt, Cash wrote his ending and the lyrics somewhat imitated his life story, or the life story of any person who is old, fragile and of ill-health.
Rick Rubin: “I suggested Hurt, because I could imagine Johnny Cash singing those words. When he sings them, you think he could have written them”
The album won "Album of the Year" award at the 2003 CMA Awards. The video for "Hurt", a song written by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails in 1994, was nominated in seven categories at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards and won the award for Best Cinematography. In February 2003, mere days before his 71st birthday, Cash won another Grammy Award for Best Country Male Vocal Performance for "Give My Love To Rose," a song Cash had originally recorded in the late 1950s. The music video for "Hurt" also won a Grammy for Best Short Form Video at the 2004 Awards.
Stand-out tracks:
Hurt - Johnny Cash (Nine Inch Nails cover)
The Man Comes Around - Johnny Cash
I Hung My Head - Johnny Cash (Sting cover)
Give My Love to Rose - Johnny Cash
Personal Jesus - Johnny Cash (Depeche Mode cover)
Sam Hall - Johnny Cash
What did you think of the music? Any thoughts?
Sources:
Cash - by Rolling Stone Magazine (2004) (biography)
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die
Unearthed boxset booklet
Album sleeves
Johnny Cash: The Last Great American (2004) (documentary)
Review
Did You Read It? Funny clip
Amazing what people will do to fit in, and this is a satire of that, ha ha (:
I joined letterboxd !
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Letterboxd is a social network for sharing your taste in film. A movie journal of what you watched, rated, and (if you want) reviewed. I think you can only join, if someone sends you an invite. A fellow LAMB invited me, and I see many others from LAMB community have accounts at letterboxd. However, anyone can surf the site for reviews, lists and ratings, even if you don't have a profile.
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