Wojciech Smarzowski

Wojciech Smarzowski (born 18 January 1963 in Korczyna near Krosno) is a Polish screenwriter and director. He studied filmmaking at the Jagiellonian University and the National Film School in Łódź (1990).[1] His 2004 film, The Wedding (not to be confused with the Andrzej Wajda film of the same title) earned special jury mention at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2005. He began his film career as a video camera operator.

Wojciech Smarzowski
Born(1963-01-18)January 18, 1963
Korczyna, Polish People’s Republic
Occupationfilm and theatre director, screenwriter
AwardsOrder of Polonia Restituta
Medal for Merit to Culture – Gloria Artis

Smarzowski’s film Róża gained the Polish Film Award in seven categories in 2011.[2] His film Traffic Department (2013) tells the story of seven policemen from Warsaw - colleagues and good friends whose lives change after one of them dies in mysterious circumstances.[3] It competed in the main competition section of the 35th Moscow International Film Festival.[4]

Kler (2018) was described by Anne Applebaum in The Washington Post as "a searing, painful film that condemns the Polish Catholic Church as corrupt and hypocritical". In its first weekend after opening, it broke box-office records in Poland and, after three weeks had been seen by 312 million people, about 10% of Poland's population.[5]

Filmography

Feature films

Director & screenwriter

Television

Director

  • Małżowina, 1998 - TV movie
  • Kuracja, 2001 - Teleplay
  • Na Wspólnej, 2003-2008 - TV series (125 episodes)
  • Klucz, 2004 - Teleplay
  • Cztery kawałki tortu, 2006 - Teleplay
  • BrzydUla, 2008-2009 - TV series (25 episodes)
  • The Londoners - TV series (8 episodes)
  • Bez tajemnic, 2013 - TV series (7 episodes)

See also

References

  1. Wojciech Smarzowski. filmpolski.pl
  2. "Rose dominates the 14th Polish film awards". filmneweurope.com.
  3. "Traffic Department". culture.pl.
  4. "First 10 Films of the 35th Moscow Film Festival Competition". MIFF. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  5. Applebaum, Anne (October 19, 2018). "In Poland, another blow to the Catholic Church". Retrieved October 20, 2018.


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