Published: 2020-10-31

Silver screen and ‘the Paris pavement’. 
Images of Polish immigrant in foreign and international film productions (1976–2011)

Kris Van Heuckelom Logo ORCID

Abstract

The article looks into the changing on­screen treatment of Polish immigrant characters living on ‘the Paris pavement’. The corpus of film productions under discussion includes Roman Polański’s The Tenant (1976), Peter Kassovitz’s Mariage blanc (1986), Costa Gavras’s La petite apocalypse (1993), Krzysztof Kieślowski’s Trois couleurs: Blanc (1994), Paweł Pawlikowski’s The Woman in the Fifth (2011) and Małgorzata Szumowska’s Elles (2011). As a comparative analysis of the films involved indicates, both the immigrant characters and the urban space associated with them are subject to gradual changes (although some remarkable spatial motifs, such as the balcony and the roof, make their appearance both in the older and the newer productions). If the earlier films tend to focus on the – often geopolitically connoted – marginalization and degradation of male (anti)heroes in the city’s historical center (or its immediate vicinity), then the more recent films shift focus to the urban periphery, where the Polish characters become part of what Dina Iordanova has called the ‘metropolitan multicultural margins’, along with other, economically underprivileged newcomers from various parts of the (postcolonial and post­Communist) world.

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Citation rules

Van Heuckelom, K. (2020). Silver screen and ‘the Paris pavement’. 
Images of Polish immigrant in foreign and international film productions (1976–2011). Postscriptum Polonistyczne, 18(2), 157–168. Retrieved from https://journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10170

Vol. 18 No. 2 (2016)
Published: 2020-11-02


ISSN: 1898-1593
eISSN: 2353-9844
Ikona DOI 10.31261/PS_P

Publisher
Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego | University of Silesia Press

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