Reverse

2009
Reverse
7.1| 1h39m| en| More Info
Released: 13 November 2009 Released
Producted By: Zespół Filmowy "Kadr"
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A story about women, set in the present and in 1950s Warsaw. Sabina, a quiet, shy woman who has just turned thirty lacks a man in her life. Her mother knows all about it and tries at all costs to find her daughter a good candidate for a husband. The whole situation is controlled by the grandmother, an eccentric lady with a sharp tongue from whom no secrets can be kept.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Director

Producted By

Zespół Filmowy "Kadr"

Trailers & Images

Reviews

Andres Salama A quirky noir comedy-drama from Poland. It is Warsaw in 1952, and Poland is under a Stalinist regime. Sabina, a woman perhaps around thirty years of age (played by Agata Buzek, showing her unusual beauty beneath the eyeglasses and the nerdy, clumsy demeanor of the character), lives in a crowded apartment with her mother and her grandmother (What happened to her father I believe is never mentioned). Her family is worried that she remains single despite her age and they keep presenting her dubious candidates. Just when her family is about to give up of matching her up with someone, a dashing stranger appears one night saving her when she was about to be mugged. They start dating, he seems handsome, masculine, articulate. But if he seems too good to be true, he is, because he has sinister plans towards her (I'm not going to reveal more of the plot here). Shot on black and white (with the exception of a few scenes happening in the present shot in color), with a good recreation of postwar Poland, perhaps the movie would have benefited from less stylistic flourishes. The performances by the lead Buzek and others (Andrzej Wajda regular Krystyna Janda plays her mother) is a plus.
Seemp deHond Sophisticated dark comedy/ Thriller film noir set in Stalinist Poland of the 50ies plays out perfectly the times where fear for the party ruled every day life and only an abundance of Wodka could smooth things out.Spinster and plain Jane Sabina, leads an uneventful life sharing an apartment with her mother and grandmother, working for a Warsaw publishing house. Just when almost given up on finding a husband, she runs seemingly by chance into mysterious macho Bronislaw, perfectly casted Dorocinski. Quickly how ever the reason for the suitor is revealed. The women have to stick together to get out of this one.
p-stepien On the backdrop of Polish cinema this was a refreshing experience showing that Polish movies don't have to fall into two very typical categories: A) dumb and entertaining; B) drab and bleak. This debut from Borys Lankosz has an atypical feel to it with a nicely paced composition of ingenuity, subtle humour, homage touches (with a Casablanca-like character to boot) and delicate Communist nostalgia.Mid-20 Sabina Jankowska (Agata Buzek) lives with her mother (Krystyna Janda) and her grandmother (Anna Polony) in Stalin-era Warsaw. She works in a state printing house as an editor, but most of her focus seems to be on finding a man in life. Quiet and subdued she goes unnoticed by most, whilst those who do notice her are not in her sphere of interest. Until one night she is saved from two muggers by a handsome mysterious young man Bronisław Falski (Marcin Dorociński). Will this be Sabina's love of her lifetime? Filmed in black and white and completed with real life footage back from the 1950s showing the rebuilding of Warsaw it is definitely an engaging experience. Even more so that the lead character of Sabina played by Agata Buzek, who gives a masterful and thankfully subtle performance. Also Marcin Dorociński is superb in his role - starting off as a noir-type hero to effortlessly transform into a simpleminded arrogant prick. Unfortunately the rest of the lead characters are very much Polish old-school acting, so over-exuberance and woodenness are all too obvious (an especially unconvincing performance was given by Polish legend Janda). That said I just get easily irritated by the type of acting so prevalent in Polish movies, so I may be biased...All in all a very nice movie. Photography is good (lighting is great and settings are of a very high standard), but some of the scenes seem to be overcooked just so that the DOP can show off some ideas, although it added nothing to the scenes. I also have issues with the colour scenes (set in modern times), which seem poorly done as if made by a totally different crew. Well maybe it's true that is is easier to shoot in B&W given the proper lighting? The script is generally fine, although some dialogues are overly poetic, complex and hence unrealistic, especially when coming from the mouth of a supposedly uneducated Bronisław. Also there are some real inconsistencies in the plot itself (Bronisław said he told his secret-service comrades that he was dating Sabina, yet no one thought of interrogating her about his disappearance?) as well as some very unlikely key plot moments (it is very highly unrealistic that Bronisław could have known that Sabina is swallowing a gold coin). I did however like the subtle humour, even though I felt some of the scenes quite forced and they never really flew for me.Definitely a good sign that such a movie was made. But on the other hand I feel that local exaltations over this Polish noir flick are highly exaggerated. It's an OKish movie by international standards, albeit a good one for Polish norms (for a similar but superior movie see "Das Leben des Anderen"). A building block with hope for a new future breed of Polish filmmakers.
brixtonbathtub With some films black and white photography is used as a cheap device to supposedly convey the mood of the past despite editing techniques and lighting that could only belong to the 21st century. Not so this film. The black and white photography reminded me of such classics as the Third Man, with deep black shadows and superb lighting, skills that I thought were lost decades ago. The cinematography and editing are unapologetically European, rather than American.The mood of Warsaw in the period shortly after the suppression of the Warsaw Uprising is chillingly portrayed, while scenes in the present, shot in colour, are intriguing short episodes rather than annoying tricks, which such flashbacks/flashes forward often can be. Because the less you know in advance about the plot and events the better, all I will say is that while it it has humour in places, it is mostly of the noir variety. This well-paced intriguing thriller makes you want to know what will happen next, gives you some surprises and doesn't reveal the full story until near the ending, which was moving, funny, and probably could relate to many women deeply affected by world events over which they have no control.All round excellent casting and acting, with Agata Buzek conveying Sabina beautifully. It's a relief to find a film where production values come first. It certainly made me think, and still does, one month after I saw it at the Karlovy Vary film festival. See it if you like the best of European cinema.