Zacma: Blindness Movies Full HD 1080p Online Streaming
Storyline Zacma: Blindness
A little known episode from the life of Stalinist security police office Julia Brystiger. Her nickname Bloody Luna was a reference to her incredibly brutal methods of interrogation. In the early 1960s, she appears in a centre for the blind on the outskirts of Warsaw, a place often visited by Cardinal Wyszyński, whose imprisonment in 1953-1956 Brystiger supervised personally. During a difficult and heated discussion with the cardinal, Brystiger denounces the communist ideology and begs for forgiveness for her crimes and for guidance in her search for God.Movie details
Title : Zacma: BlindnessRelease : 2016-11-25
Genre : Drama
Runtime : 110
Company : Ministerstwo Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego, Kino Świat
Rating :
6 out of 10 From 2 Users
Homepage : Homepage Movie
Trailer : Video Trailer
Casts of Zacma: Blindness
Maria Mamona, Malgorzata Zajaczkowska, Janusz Gajos, Marek Kalita, Bartosz Porczyk, Kazimierz Kaczor, Sławomir Orzechowski, Marcin Troński, Barbara Bursztynowicz, Jacek Bursztynowicz, Zbigniew Konopka, Andrzej Szenajch, Piotr Toloczko, Mariusz Wojciechowski, Olga Bołądź,Read More About Zacma: Blindness
Directed by Ryszard Bugajski. With Maria Mamona, Malgorzata Zajaczkowska, Janusz Gajos, Marek Kalita. The film shows an obscure episode from the life of a Stalinist criminal - Colonel of the Office of Public Security, Julia Brystiger. Her nickname was "Bloody Luna" because during interrogations she tortured prisoners with extreme cruelty. At the beginning of 1960s she appeared in Laski near ...
Haunted by her ruthless past, a former high-ranking security officer in Poland’s communist government seeks an audience with the Primate of the Polish Cathol...
Ryszard Bugajski‘s Zacma: Blindness opens on an empty apartment, phone incessantly ringing to cut through the silence. Julia lifts the receiver and the caller hangs up. As soon as she puts it back in its cradle the rings re-commence.
At the beginning of the 1960s she came to the Institute for the Blind in Laski near Warsaw where the Catholic Primate of Poland, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński frequently visited. His imprisonment in the years of 1953-1956 was supervised by none other than Julia Brystiger.
Zacma: Blindness is a relentless inquiry into a woman seeking an audience with the Primate of Poland, the country's top Catholic cardinal. It turns out that the woman, Julia, was once a high-ranking and particularly ruthless Communist Party official, having supervised the interrogation and torture of political prisoners.
The history of the last years of his life Julia Brystigerowej. Brystigerowa, the infamous "Bloody Luna", in the 50s high female officer UB, at the end of life came to the environment centered ...
A little known episode from the life of Stalinist security police office Julia Brystiger. Her nickname Bloody Luna was a reference to her incredibly brutal methods of interrogation. In the early 1960s, she appears in a centre for the blind on the outskirts of Warsaw, a place often visited by Cardinal Wyszyński, whose imprisonment in 1953-1956 Brystiger supervised personally.
A sadistic Polish interrogator is haunted by her past crimes in ZACMA: BLINDNESS, a masterfully crafted and brilliantly acted arthouse drama based on actual events before and after the collapse of the Iron Curtain.. A notorious member of the communist security apparatus, Julia Brystiger brutally persecuted political dissidents and religious figures during Poland’s repressive Stalinist period.
From the beginning, the new film by acclaimed Polish director Ryszard Bugajski, starring Maria Mamona, throws you into a whirlpool of guilt, remorse and painful search for a spiritual overhaul, and it never quits. Bugajski, a longtime disciple of the late Andrzej Wajda, directed Interrogation, which brought Krystyna Janda the Best Actress Award at the 1990 Cannes Film
73-year-old Polish writer-director Ryszard Bugajski and actor Maria Mamona, stellar playing the lead role as Julia Prajs Brystygier, discuss the making of and acting in the movie Zacma: Blindness.
Haunted by her ruthless past, a former high-ranking security officer in Poland’s communist government seeks an audience with the Primate of the Polish Cathol...
Ryszard Bugajski‘s Zacma: Blindness opens on an empty apartment, phone incessantly ringing to cut through the silence. Julia lifts the receiver and the caller hangs up. As soon as she puts it back in its cradle the rings re-commence.
At the beginning of the 1960s she came to the Institute for the Blind in Laski near Warsaw where the Catholic Primate of Poland, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński frequently visited. His imprisonment in the years of 1953-1956 was supervised by none other than Julia Brystiger.
Zacma: Blindness is a relentless inquiry into a woman seeking an audience with the Primate of Poland, the country's top Catholic cardinal. It turns out that the woman, Julia, was once a high-ranking and particularly ruthless Communist Party official, having supervised the interrogation and torture of political prisoners.
The history of the last years of his life Julia Brystigerowej. Brystigerowa, the infamous "Bloody Luna", in the 50s high female officer UB, at the end of life came to the environment centered ...
A little known episode from the life of Stalinist security police office Julia Brystiger. Her nickname Bloody Luna was a reference to her incredibly brutal methods of interrogation. In the early 1960s, she appears in a centre for the blind on the outskirts of Warsaw, a place often visited by Cardinal Wyszyński, whose imprisonment in 1953-1956 Brystiger supervised personally.
A sadistic Polish interrogator is haunted by her past crimes in ZACMA: BLINDNESS, a masterfully crafted and brilliantly acted arthouse drama based on actual events before and after the collapse of the Iron Curtain.. A notorious member of the communist security apparatus, Julia Brystiger brutally persecuted political dissidents and religious figures during Poland’s repressive Stalinist period.
From the beginning, the new film by acclaimed Polish director Ryszard Bugajski, starring Maria Mamona, throws you into a whirlpool of guilt, remorse and painful search for a spiritual overhaul, and it never quits. Bugajski, a longtime disciple of the late Andrzej Wajda, directed Interrogation, which brought Krystyna Janda the Best Actress Award at the 1990 Cannes Film
73-year-old Polish writer-director Ryszard Bugajski and actor Maria Mamona, stellar playing the lead role as Julia Prajs Brystygier, discuss the making of and acting in the movie Zacma: Blindness.
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