For the most part, the Changchun Friends website is not very active and has been superseded by the Tencent "Wechat" app by the local expat community. This website is maintained sporadically, people may still join and membership is still open, but if you are a spammer, stay away. The archived information here is still useful, but some may be out of date. There are plans to make it more useful for static information in the future. If anyone needs information about Changchun or China, you may post a message and it probably will get a response but not immediately.

Changchun Friends

a great way to get involved

ASHES AND DIAMONDS. a Polish film

Event Details

ASHES AND DIAMONDS. a Polish film

Time: September 4, 2013 from 7pm to 10pm
Location: Grandpas
Event Type: changchun, film, society
Organized By: Steve mellow
Latest Activity: Sep 1, 2013

Export to Outlook or iCal (.ics)

Event Description

Comment Wall

Add a Comment

RSVP for ASHES AND DIAMONDS. a Polish film to add comments!

Join Changchun Friends

Comment by Richard Roman on September 1, 2013 at 13:21
Glad you are repeating this/ showing it for first time. Last week was a miserable ought to go out. however, I will be late- maybe 8
Comment by Steve mellow on September 1, 2013 at 11:41
Surely the most mature of the trilogy; it's certainly the most elliptical and stylistically audacious. At the start, Cybulski is a laidback, coldly cynical assassin who lolls on his back in a field waiting to carry out his latest hit; suffering a crisis of confidence in light of his awakening love for a woman, he flirts with desertion before resigning himself to the demands of his position. His personal journey speaks eloquently to the national trauma, and he's just the most prominent in a complex collection of transition figures, caught on the official last night of the war, now looking forward but not yet able to escape the ravages of war and the attendant moral and psychological confusion, not yet free of potential victimhood (like the mayor's assistant who on learning of his boss' promotion drinks excessively in celebration of his own presumed advancement, but in his disruptive drunkenness kills off what future he had). The ending, intercutting a personal tragedy with the dancers doing the elegant polannaise in the streaming light of dawn, like disembodied Felliniesque figures, perfectly encapsulates the film's mix of toughness and allusiveness.

Attending (3)

© 2024   Created by Richard Roman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service