Drama
Thriller
Directed by Bartosz Kruhlik
2019
1 h 18 min
Three men, one place and one event that will change the life of each one of them.
Marek Braun
Aspirant SĆawek Makowski
Marcin Hycnar
Adam Nowak
Marcin Zarzeczny
MichaĆ Matys
Agnieszka Skibicka
Iwona Matys
Anna Mrozowska
Policjantka Magda
MichaĆ Pawlik
Policjant "MĆody"
Jacek Bromski
Producer
Marcin KasiĆski
Sound Director
MichaĆ Dymek
Director of Photography
Ewa JastrzÄbska
Magdalena ChowaĆska
Editor
Bartosz Kruhlik
Writer
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Stephen Campbell
**_A fascinating study of how a life-altering catastrophe for one person is nothing more than a traffic jam for another_** >_Stars are fires that burn for thousands of years. Some of them burn slow and long, like red dwarfs. Others â blue giants â burn their fuel so fast they shine across great distances, and are easy to see. As they start to run out of fuel, they burn helium, grow even hotter, and explode in a supernova. Supernovas, they're brighter than the brightest galaxies. They die, but everyone watches them go._ - Jodi Picoult; _My Sister's Keeper_ (2004) >_There are patterns b__ecause we try to find them. A desperate attempt at order because we can't face the terror that it might all be random._ - Lauren Beukes; _The Shining Girls_ (2013) The debut feature from writer/director Bartosz Kruhlik, _Supernova_ is an excellently made and thematically fascinating film that manages to pack a lot into its 78 minutes; multiple well-rounded characters, several well-developed plot strands, socio-political commentary, existential musing, and a _dĂ©nouement_ that throws everything we've seen into relief. The film opens on a Sunday morning in an unspecified area in rural Poland. On a quiet country road, we're introduced to Iwona Matys (Agnieszka Skibicka) and her two young children, PaweĆek (Borys BartĆomiejczyk) and PiotruĆ (Iwo Rajski), who emerge from their home, pursued by her husband, MichaĆ (Marcin Zarzeczny). Even at this early hour, MichaĆ is already drunk, and it quickly becomes apparent that Iwona is in the process of leaving him, taking the children with her. As he loses pace with them, he hails down a passing car driven by Adam Nowak (Marcin Hycnar), an arrogant politician. As MichaĆ leans into the car, he throws up, causing Adam to speed away. However, in his disgust Adam takes his eyes off the road, resulting in a horrifying crash from which he immediately flees. Completely unaware of the collision, however, MichaĆ passes out in a ditch. Meanwhile, two policemen â SĆawek (Marek Braun) a veteran known for his calm demeanour, and his young, enthusiastic-to-a-fault partner MĆody (MichaĆ Pawlik) â receive the call to attend the crash. Arriving at the location, they find an ambulance and fire-brigade already in attendance, but when he surveys the scene, the usually unflappable SĆawek reacts in utter horror. Soon thereafter Zygmunt (Dariusz Dluzewski), the acerbic but efficient Komendant of the force, arrives with explicit orders to minimise the fall-out for Adam, who has by now returned to the scene. However, as word spreads through the local community, a crowd gathers, and as Adam's role in the crash becomes apparent, the locals' thoughts turn to vengeance. As the police attempt to contain the situation, MichaĆ, Adam, and SĆawek find themselves in a situation from which none of them will emerge unscathed. Kruhlik uses the site of the crash as a kind of representative microcosm, an allegorical melting pot wherein he examines issues such as group mentality, political arrogance, the abuse of law, alcoholism, the difficulties of police work, and the ghoulish curiosity which leads people to take out their phones to record a tragedy before they think to offer assistance. The two main themes, however, are the dissemination of communal anger (the "Supernova" of the title refers to the build-up of emotion that seems like it can only result in a devastating explosion) and the idea that a life-altering event for one person is nothing more than a traffic jam for another. Whilst MichaĆ, Adam, and SĆawek are having their entire existence ripped out from under them, others find the situation a mild inconvenience that necessities a slight change in travel plans. Meanwhile, the crowd of onlookers, at first morbidly curious, soon turn aggressive as word of Adam's actions percolate through their number and they realise that he may use his position to worm his way out of culpability. And so the feeling of anger rapidly spreads like a kind of emotional Chinese whisper, with each member of the group influencing the thinking of those around them. It's all very interesting and maturely handled by Kruhlik as we find ourselves getting drawn into this increasingly dangerous and unpredictable situation. One of the most impressive aspects of the film is how much character development Kruhlik packs in. We learn a lot more about the three main characters than you might expect in such a short film, but others are fleshed out too; MĆody and Zygmunt, for example, both receive some backstory, as does Magda (Anna Mrozowska), a nervous young policewoman unsure how to react to three youths aggressively hitting on her. The screenplay is structurally very simple (it was purposely written to be shot on a shoestring budget), but this simplicity does not preclude thematic complexity or character interiority. The film is also aesthetically impressive, with cinematographer MichaĆ Dymek employing long takes that make use of the geography of the single location. The opening shot, for example, begins on the Matys home, follows Iwona and MichaĆ some way down the road, pauses to show MichaĆ trying to get into Adam's car, and then finally comes to rest on MichaĆ as he falls asleep in a ditch. With the film also taking place in something close to real-time, this creates a strong sense of almost documentarian immediacy. All things considered, I thought _Supernova_ was an impressive debut. It's fairly slight, but it's very competently made, and it has some interesting things to say about fate and how we are all, naturally enough, each at the centre of our own conception of reality.