| Index | 5 reviews in total |
A young boy lives near a dog shelter and plays football for a school team.
He also suffers from extreme cruelty from his aggressive father. When his
team coach buys new kit it means Bartek will have to get changed in front of
everyone else, exposing the marks on his body. His refusal to play leads to
a confrontation between him, his coach and his father.
As a short film lover I try to get them from all over but I'm a fool, so I
assume that foreign films won't be as good as UK or US shorts. However this
is a very good look at a child abuse situation. The setting is rough and
real and the attention to detail is good. I got into the boy's situation
easily all the adults in his life are pretty aggressive and he has grown
quiet when around them. It's not sensationalising anything and many may be
let down by how down beat the drama is.
I admit that it did have an unsatisfying edge to it as I naturally expect
this sort of thing to have a semi-happy or emotional ending, whereas this is
more downbeat. I still felt impacted by the reality though. The cast are
excellent and you never for a second think `these actors are good' because I
never saw them as pretending or giving a performance. Bartosz Idczak was
great and really brought Bartek into life.
Overall it may be a little bleak and ordinary for some viewers but the
characters are great and the direction is excellent. It may be downbeat but
this is well worth a look.
Yes, so engaging, one can not see it without a struggle of heart. But there's something more, this short breaks one of happy end scenary schema. It's so true. Brings you pictures from real world,our world. Encourages you to look around. Can make you begin see more, understand more. Forces you to think some things over one more time.
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I watched this title in one limited screening in the Polish Institute
in London. Despite the short length it was very emotional and raised up
a serious issue about child abuse, particularly in post-communist
Poland, though it could be applied to any country. The actors,
especially the main lead but also his gyms teacher were excellent and
despite the pessimistic ending it left a glimmer of hope of how an
abused child can find comfort even in something all the others discard
as insignificant.
I felt the same impact as with the film Lilja-4ever and also the short
animated film "Dog", by Suzie Templeton.
A gem and shouldn't be missed.
The most engaging short movie I have ever seen. Meska Sprawa proves that one can deal with very serious issues in 26 minutes. If you haven't seen it, do it right now. No wonder Slawomir Fabicki's first (!) movie gets awards at any short movie festival.
This is a short film about child abuse. The child actor is very
engaging, extremely natural, very well led by the director. The
cinematography gives everything a grimy, realistic, post-communist
bleakness. Kudos to the director for keeping everything tight and lean.
Whether the film could be more uplifting is a question of taste. Polish
cinema isn't exactly known for it's light touch so don't expect a happy
ending.
The only real problem with the story is that it's not very original. In
fact, it looks like a compressed version of "Kes" with dogs subsituted
for birds. I guess if you haven't seen that Ken Loach film it won't
matter but this fact stuck out for me.
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