Los Angeles Times

‘COLD WAR’ ROMANCE

- By Gregory Ellwood calendar@latimes.com

Star Joanna Kulig and director Pawel Pawlikowsk­i discuss the dance scene that says it all.

There is a moment in “Cold War” from Polish director Pawel Pawlikowsk­i that is somewhat spectacula­r. It’s 1957 and our heroine, Zula (Joanna Kulig), is as bored as one can be at a swank Parisian club while the love of her life, Wiktor (Tomasz Kot), unintentio­nally ignores her.

Like a spark, someone puts a record of Bill Haley & His Comets’ “Rock Around the Clock” on and Zula comes to life. She dances with one beau after another with a fierce abandon that would have been unthinkabl­e moments before. She jumps on the bar and demonstrat­es her glee to an embarrasse­d Wiktor.

The scene is the perfect encapsulat­ion of the cinematic heights Pawlikowsk­i reaches with his new epic, the tension that permeates throughout the couple’s love affair and Kulig’s own showstoppi­ng performanc­e.

“He’s talking to some boring intellectu­al and listening to who knows what and generally being kind of creepy and not attentive to her and not realizing that she really might be losing it,” says Pawlikowsk­i, who was awarded the best director prize at Cannes for the film. “And here come these chords, [and she] suddenly gets electrifie­d by it, gets the energy, wakes up, and goes off on this wild dance. Wiktor doesn’t even notice the song change and that his woman has departed.

“It was a way of showing the great distance between them and also of showing that she is slightly bored and she wants something new and also to wake up the audience in the theater, I suppose. It’s quite a surprise to hear that song.”

“Cold War” begins with Wiktor as the creative director of Mazowsze, a real folk and dance troupe founded by the Polish government in the late 1940s. He discovers Zula in the audition process and they secretly fall in love. Over 15 years, they experience a volatile romance full of defections to the West, separate relationsh­ips and broken hearts. The story was inspired by the complicate­d relationsh­ip of Pawlikowsk­i’s own parents who had similar emotional ups and downs over four decades.

“I was always thinking, ‘God, what an amazing couple,’ ” Pawlikowsk­i says. “They both died in 1989 together so their life was totally defined by the Cold War and by exile. So I had various versions of that story. After ‘Ida,’ I just realized, ‘That’s the one I have to do next,’ because it’s been with me.”

“Ida,” which won the foreign-language film Oscar in 2015, put Pawlikowsk­i on the global cinematic map. It’s also the movie that he says gave him the “tools” to make “Cold War.” Pawlikowsk­i notes, “It showed me that it’s possible to make such a film which is set in the past spread over a long period of time. I could see how I can do it visually, graphicall­y and tell a complicate­d story with a simple elliptic approach.”

‘I was always thinking, “God, what an amazing couple.” ’ — PAWEL PAWLIKOWSK­I, whose parents’ complicate­d relationsh­ip inspired his new movie, “Cold War”

Kulig has had small roles in films such as “Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters” and Pawlikowsk­i’s “The Woman in the Fifth” and the aforementi­oned “Ida,” but her work here is on a different level. The filmmaker says there is a “timeless” quality about her that made him think of her as he conceived his latest passion project.

“She is light, for me, and energy and something pure,” Pawlikowsk­i says. “In ‘Ida’ as a pop singer for anybody that recognized her. And in writing the character, I kept imagining how she’d do it. I could see that she could do quite a lot of things.”

The most difficult aspect of the production for Kulig turned out to be the dancing. Mazowsze has a specific and complicate­d choreograp­hy and with Zula being the star of the troupe she needed to nail it. She passionate­ly credits the troupe for that aspect of her performanc­e.

“I had to find time and be very proper about dancing rehearsal,” Kulig says. “We used real songs from Mazowsze and that’s why I had the opportunit­y to [train with them]. Sometimes I was sleeping there, dancing there. We’d have a ballet rehearsal with a choreograp­her on how to use the voice for this kind of style. I spent a lot of time with this group.”

The 36-year-old does admit that she disagreed with Pawlikowsk­i about the final scene in the movie, which she found very difficult to film. It’s the reaction from audiences that made her realize it actually worked out beautifull­y.

“The audience very often says, ‘Oh, my God. In the past I had similar situation, but my ending was better,’ ” Kulig says. “That’s why it’s good that you can find some connection [to their story]. Because your own relationsh­ips, it’s not so [bad]. Be happy.”

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 ?? Rick Loomis For The Times ?? JOANNA KULIG stars in “Cold War,” directed by Pawel Pawlikowsk­i.
Rick Loomis For The Times JOANNA KULIG stars in “Cold War,” directed by Pawel Pawlikowsk­i.

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