The Scotsman

Intense, complex tale told with flair and fluidity

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Cold War

My Friend the Polish Girl

Incredible­s 2

A LATE addition to this year’s Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival, Cold War provides a welcome injection of artistic brilliance into a lineup that’s a little short on toptier arthouse fare. Pawel Pawlikowsk­i’s first film since his Oscar-winning Ida sees the formerly British-based filmmaker burrowing ever further into his Polish roots with a haunting love story loosely inspired by his own parents’ tempestuou­s relationsh­ip.

Set against the backdrop of the massive political and cultural changes taking place across post-war Europe, the film tracks the fiery relationsh­ip of jazz musician Wiktor (Tomasz Kot) and singer Zula (a star-making turn from Joanna Kulig) over a 15-year period during which their initial spark keeps reigniting in ways both dreamy and destructiv­e. As with Ida, it’s shot in period-evoking black and white, which gives the film a nostalgic cinematic sheen while maintainin­g focus on the harsh reality of lives lived under restrictiv­e conditions.

Like a bleaker, Eastern Bloc

take on Richard Linklater’s Before trilogy, this is a film that understand­s the intensity and complexity of a true connection as it reverberat­es through the years.

Sticking with Polish filmmakers, Ewa Banaskiewi­cz and Mateusz Dymek’s My Friend the Polish Girl is a British-set drama, also shot in black and white, that uses the guise of a documentar­y to explore — albeit somewhat tenuously — the immigrant experience in postbrexit Britain. Framed as the debut project of a narcissist­ic American documentar­y maker (Emma Friedman-cohen) trying to make a film about a struggling Polish actress (Anita Piotrowska) living in London, we’re expected to buy into the idea that their darkening relationsh­ip metaphoric­ally represents the way society at large exploits and discards immigrants. Sadly the acting and writing isn’t convincing enough to transcend its intentiona­lly pretentiou­s conceit.

A nationwide secret screening of Incredible­s 2 in multiplexe­s earlier this week means that the big EIFF family gala this weekend for Pixar’s new film isn’t even its first public screening in Edinburgh, let alone Scotland. Thunder duly stolen, though, the film is a solid sequel, even if the unusually long 14-year gap between films means its take on superhero lore isn’t quite as fresh. Still writer/ director Brad Bird’s smart decision to focus the story on Holly Hunter’s Elastigirl makes it more in tune with the Time’s Up era and the nascent powers of baby Jack-jack steal the show.

*Cold War is at Cineworld, Edinburgh, tomorrow; My Friend the Polish Girl is at the Odeon on 26 June; Incredible­s 2 is at the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh tomorrow and on general release from 13 July

 ??  ?? My Friend the Polish Girl fails to convince
My Friend the Polish Girl fails to convince
 ??  ?? Joanna Kulig as singer Zula puts in a star-making performanc­e in Cold War
Joanna Kulig as singer Zula puts in a star-making performanc­e in Cold War

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