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| Dekalog (The Decalogue) (1988) is a Polish film series, originally made as a television miniseries, directed by Krzysztof Kieślowski and co-written by Kieślowski with Krzysztof Piesiewicz, with music by Zbigniew Preisner. It consists of ten one-hour films, each of which represents one of the Ten Commandments and explores possible meanings of the commandment—often ambiguous or contradictory—within a fictional story set in modern Poland. The series is Kieślowski's most acclaimed work and has won numerous international awards, though it was not widely released outside Europe until the late 1990s. Filmmaker Stanley Kubrick described it as the only masterpiece he could name in his lifetime. Though each film is independent, most of them share the same setting (a large housing project in Warsaw) and some of the characters are acquainted with each other. There is also a nameless character (Artur Barciś), possibly supernatural, who observes the main characters at key moments but never intervenes. The large cast includes both famous actors and unknowns, many of whom Kieślowski also used in other films. Typically for Kieślowski, the tone of most of the films is meditative and melancholy, except for the last one, which (like Three Colors: White, which features two of the same actors) is a black comedy. The series was conceived when Piesiewicz, who had seen a 15th-century artwork illustrating the commandments in scenes from that time period, suggested the idea of a modern equivalent. Kieślowski, though an agnostic, was interested in the philosophical challenge and also wanted to use the series as a portrait of the hardships of Polish society, while deliberately avoiding the political issues he had depicted in earlier films. He originally meant to hire ten different directors, but decided to direct the films himself, though using a different cinematographer for each. The ten films are titled simply by number (e.g. Decalogue: One). In English, they are sometimes referred to by the commonly used short forms of the commandments based on the King James Bible text, as follows. However, Kieślowski said that the films did not correspond exactly to the commandments, and never used their names himself. However, they appear to follow with the Roman Catholic enumeration of the commandments more than any others. On the Jewish numbering, the first statement is only I am the Lord your God (interpreted as a commandment to believe in God); but in the first film, the computer is widely regarded as symbolizing a false god, which is the second commandment in Jewish. On Jewish and many Protestant numberings, there is only one commandment about Covetousness; on the Catholic reading, there are two, and the ninth film, about a husband's mistrust of his wife, seems to involve this:
[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for The Decalogue ] Some related entries: Hugh Hudson | Street Fighter | Dominic Sena | Enduring Love | Molly Weasley | Police Academy 3: Back in Training | Post-Production Diary | George Kuchar | Suicide Six | The Damned | My Brother Nikhil This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article The Decalogue; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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