vrijdag 2 mei 2008

Savater Recensie

Boek
'De Tien Geboden ' van Fernando Savater
In zijn boek De Tien Geboden probeert de Spaanse filosoof Fernando Savater uit te zoeken of deze Bijbelse geboden nog bruikbaar zijn in onze tijd en samenleving. Een van de grootste problemen is vandaag alvast het eerste gebod: ‘Naast mij zult gij geen andere goden hebben’. Deze bepaling wijst volgens de auteur op een onzekerheid van God die blijkbaar wil verhinderen dat we zouden luisteren naar een ‘valse’ God. Maar het gebod zegt nog meer. Het demonstreert een grote intolerantie tegenover mensen met een andere geloofsovertuiging. Wat betekent dan nog het begrip ‘naastenliefde’ dat de meeste godsdiensten zo hoog in het vaandel voeren? Recensie door Dirk Verhofstadt. In Liberalis: Lees meer.

dinsdag 1 april 2008

Artikelen

A metaphysics of the transcendent through a phenomenology of film: choosing metaphysics over politics
Caroline Joan Picart
Review of Communication Volume 4, Issue 3 & 4, July 2004 , pages 316 - 320

Lucid Dreams: The Films of Krzysztof Kieslowski
Paul Coates
Slavic Review: Vol. 60, No. 1 (Spring, 2001), pp. 167-168

Cinema and Subjectivity in Krzysztof Kieslowski
Paul C. Santilli
Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64 (1) , 147–156

maandag 31 maart 2008

Love and Desire

Love and Desire in the Cinema
Grodal, Torben Kragh
Cinema Journal - 43, Number 2, Winter 2004, pp. 26-46


Torben Kragh Grodal - Love and Desire in the Cinema - Cinema Journal 43:2 Cinema Journal 43.2 (2004) 26-46 Love and Desire in the Cinema Torben Grodal Abstract This essay compares romantic films with pornographic films and argues that the former focus on the establishment of personalized, exclusive relations -- bonds of love -- whereas the latter focus on anonymous desire. In addition, the article examines the evolutionary roots of love and desire and compares the explanatory value of evolutionary psychology with psychoanalysis for film studies. To explain emotions as depicted in films, it is necessary to assume that humans have needs and emotions that are formed in a specific cultural context but that are supported by innate predispositions. In particular, recent scholarly writing on film has addressed the way in which human culture has developed within a framework nature provided. In Moving Pictures, I argued that film genres such as action, adventure, comedy, love stories, pornography, and horror derive their emotional strength from innate body-mind structures that developed in order to enhance the fitness and survival of our hunter-gatherer ancestors on the savannahs of East Africa. In this article, I analyze key elements of romantic films and mainstream pornography and show that love stories are concerned with personalized bonding whereas mainstream pornography represents anonymous desire. I examine the way in which romantic films deal with the...

Lens of Faith

Movies That Matter: Reading Film Through the Lens of Faith
Richard Leonard

Google Books

In modern culture, nothing matters more than the movies, says popular film critic and Jesuit Richard Leonard. Movies that Matter views fifty important movies through a "lens of faith," showing how the great directors, screenwriters, and actors use the language of film to celebrate the human spirit and put us in touch with the divine.

Exodus

Exodus Through the Centuries
Door Scott M. Langston

Google Books


This bible commentary looks at how Exodus has influenced and has been influenced by history, religion, politics, the arts and other forms of culture over the ages. A bible commentary tracing the reception history of Exodus from Old Testament times, through the Patristic and Reformation periods, to the present day. Considers the ways in which Exodus has influenced and has been influenced by history, religion, politics, the arts and other forms of culture in Jewish, Christian and secular settings. Looks at how Exodus has served as a tool of liberation and tyranny in a variety of settings. Shows how Exodus has been used to shape the identities of individuals and groups. Discusses the works of current and past poets, musicians, film-makers, authors and artists influenced by Exodus. Addresses uses of Exodus related to American and European history such as the Glorious Revolution, colonialism, the American Revolution, Civil War, Civil Rights Movement, African-Americans, and Native Americans, as well as uses by prominent and little-known historical figuresConsiders the impact of the Ten Commandments and other laws, in legal, political and religious contexts. The Blackwell Bible Commentary series is supported by a website at www.bbibcomm.net

Cinema, Religion

Cinema, Religion, and the Romantic Legacy: Through a Glass Darkly
Paul Coates

Google Books

Any consideration of the interrelations of religion and cinema must address the argument that embeds religion, myth and the sacred in language. This text explores the manner in which cinema, religion and the romantic legacy are linked.

Nussbaum

Martha Nussbaum and Thomas Aquinas on the Emotions
Carlo Leget
Theological Studies, Vol. 64, 2003

Questia


All this works out in a second, related point: the killing of human beings. Aquinas's reflection on the legitimacy of killing human beings has an internal coherence which is constituted by a theocentric logic. (62) But in reflecting on the legitimacy of killing, he loses sight of the corporeal reality which is at stake. (63) Of course, abstracting from the concrete situation is important from the viewpoint of justice, most of the "legitimate" instances of killing can be justified as a defense of innocent human beings, and morally good actions (such as martyrdom) are sometimes completely at odds with what we like to see or do. Nussbaum, in contrast to Aquinas, consistently adopts the perspective of the vulnerable corporeal human being. From this perspective Aquinas's point of view has sometimes a one-sidedness that should warn us from translating his conclusions to contemporary culture. When Aquinas discusses e.g. the questions as to whether it is allowed to kill sinners, he compares the killing with cutting of a rotten limp or killing an animal. (64) Although I hesitate to judge medieval times--considering the complexity of the history of mentality and understanding the emotions of different cultures--in contemporary society there are better and more humane ways of dealing with those who are a threat to the community. (65)

(63) See Krzysztof Kieslowski's A Short Film about Killing (part 5 of Dekalog: The Ten Commandments).

New Image of Religious films

New Image of Religious Film
John R. May

Google Books
Contributors from richly diverse backgrounds explore a wide range of current issues concerning the interrelationship of religion and film.

Losing Moses on the Freeway

Losing Moses on the Freeway: The 10 Commandments in America
Chris Hedges

Google Books

The 10 Commandments -- the laws given to Moses by God -- are beyond the scope of human law. They are rules meant to hold us together but, when dishonored, they lead to discord and violence.In this fierce, articulate narrative, Hedges, who graduated from seminary at Harvard Divinity School, looks through the lens of each commandment to examine the moral ruin of American society. With urgency and passion, he challenges readers to take a hard look at the disconnect between their supposed values and the shallow, self-absorbed lives many people actually lead.Taking examples from his personal life and twenty years of reporting, Hedges explores one commandment at a time, each through a particular social group. With each story, he reveals the universal nature of personal suffering, discovery, and redemption -- and explores the laws that we have tried to follow, often unsuccessfully, for the past 6,000 years.

Religious Film Fears 3

Religious Film Fears 3: Being Sacrilegious, Criticising or Devaluing the Faith
© Anton Karl Kozlovic

Quodlibet Journal: Volume 7 Number 2, April - June 2005

Abstract
Many believers are fearful of feature films for a variety of scriptural, moral and psychospiritual reasons. Despite the cinema being the artform of the 20th century and the basis of a moving image culture that will dominate well into the 21st century. Anton Karl Kozlovic (2003a) had previously explored the religious film fears associated with Satanic infusion, graven images and iconographic perversion, and then followed this by an exploration of the fear of cinematic sinfulness (Kozlovic, 2003b). However, even more varieties of religious film fears abound. Using textually-based, humanist film criticism as the analytical lens, the critical film and religion literature was reviewed and the additional fears of being sacrilegious, criticising or devaluing the faith was copiously explicated and documented herein. It was concluded that popular films are a worthwhile and exciting pedagogic tool, but they require constant monitoring, vigilance and control by faith communities for integrity, protection and quality assurance reasons. Biblically-based counter-proposals and other anti-film defences were proffered to address this tangible concern. Further research into the exciting interdisciplinary field of religion-and-film was recommended.

Religious films

Quodlibet Journal: Volume 5 Number 2-3, July 2003
http://www.Quodlibet.net

Religious Film Fears 1: Satanic Infusion, Graven Images and Iconographic Perversion
© Anton Karl Kozlovic

Sacred Cinema

Sacred cinema: exploring Christian sensibilities within popular Hollywood films

Anton Karl Kozlovic

Journal of Beliefs & Values, Volume 28, Issue 2 August 2007 , pages 195 - 208

Abstract

Numerous Christian sensibilities have permeated the popular cinema, but they are frequently undetected, unappreciated or unwanted by those fearful of the cinema's potentially corrupting effect. Yet, a postmodern religious education requires the embracement of this communication media, not its rejection, employing discernment not denial. A first step in this corrective process is to raise the profession's consciousness about the possibilities of sacred cinema, which is the primary purpose of this paper. Consequently, using textually based, humanist film criticism as the analytical lens, the critical film and religion literature was reviewed, the popular Hollywood cinema scanned and the following areas explicated herein, namely: (a) holy plotlines, (b) divine symbolism, and (c) sacred subtexts - the Christ-figure. All three categories were supplied with copious inter-genre exemplars to demonstrate their diversity and richness. It was concluded that the sacred cinema is a legitimate pop culture phenomenon and a living genre that has immense pedagogic utility for religious education aimed squarely at the proverbial children-of-the-media. As such, it should be proactively employed as a postmodern act of applied cinema that simultaneously values the audiovisual, education and enjoyment. Further research into this emerging and exciting interdisciplinary field was recommended.

Poland's Cinema of collision

Decalogue: Poland’s cinema of collision
Reni Celeste

Studies in European Cinema. Vol 1. Issue 3. November 2004.

This article argues that Kieslowski’s Decalogue, despite being produced during the fall of Communism, exemplifies the complex relation to the law that Polish cinema has developed in the post-war years. The relation between film, state, and spectator has forged a cinema that should be understood as tragic in its interpretation of justice as a double bind, rather than simply as an ideological or political cinema.

The cinema of

The Cinema of Krzysztof Kieslowski ...
Zoeken naar boeken met Google

Since his death in 1996, Krzysztof Kieslowski has remained the best-known contemporary Polish filmmaker and one of the most popular and respected European directors, internationally renowned for his ambitious "Decalogue" and "Three Colors" trilogy. In this new addition to the Directors'Cuts series, Marek Haltof provides a comprehensive study of Kieslowski's cinema, discussing industrial practices in Poland and stressing that the director did not fit the traditional image of a "great" East-Central European auteur. He draws a fascinating portrait of the stridently independent director's work, noting that Kieslowski was not afraid to express unpopular views in film or in life. Haltof also shows how the director's work remains unique in the context of Polish documentary and narrative cinema.

Article

Cunneen, Joseph

"Being Alive is a Gift": Krzysztof Kieslowski's The Decalogue
Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality - Volume 1, Number 1, Spring 2001, pp. 79-85

Joseph Cunneen - "Being Alive is a Gift": Krzysztof Kieslowski's The Decalogue - Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality 1:1 Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality 1.1 (2001) 79-85 Perspective "Being Alive is a Gift": Krzysztof Kieslowski's The Decalogue Joseph Cunneen Like most art of spiritual depth, Krzysztof Kieslowski's "The Decalogue," his series of ten one-hour films on the Ten Commandments, was not brought into being for didactic or religious purposes. The Polish film director, who died in 1996, called himself an agnostic; it was Krzysztof Piesiewicz, a criminal lawyer in Warsaw (who refers to himself as "Christian rather than Catholic") who first suggested the project and ended up collaborating on the screenplay of "The Decalogue," which was first shown on Polish TV in 1989. "Our idea was very simple," Kieslowski said. "The Decalogue is one of the ethical foundations of our society. Everyone is more or less familiar with the Ten Commandments, and agrees with them, but no one really observes them." Hailed by critics as the greatest cinematic achievement of the last generation, "The Decalogue" was known in the United States only to film festival audiences until last year, when it was released in a handsome five-video edition. Kieslowski's experience as a documentary filmmaker underlies his determination to present an intense and complex view of...

Tien Geboden en de films...

Een opdracht binnen een cursus waarin de relatie tussen de films van Kieslowski en de tien geboden wordt geduid.


TEN COMMANDMENTS (22-852)
Dr. Ken Vaux
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
Fall 2005

zaterdag 23 februari 2008

Commandments as interpretation

2007 February « The Kugelmass Episodes


"There is literally no truth to any statement, or to the larger compounds of whole texts, until they have been acted out in some way. Before that, they signify nothing, which is why an appeal to interpretation is not an “appeal to consequences.” The Ten Commandments, the direct utterances of God to Moses, are more substantial for having been interpreted in the course of Kieslowski’s Decalogue."

Religion and fillm

Religion and film: Part I: history and criticism



"Perlmutter (1997) reads Krzysztof Kieslowski's The Decalogue and sees a fusion of the Father-God and the Father Land. The loss of morality and personal freedom in Poland is marked by absent lawgivers, images of a recurring angel, and a need for more than the impersonal god of the commandments. Looking at the cinematic art of Kieslowski, Kickasola (2004) brilliantly charts the liminal spaces of his films (Red), "demarcating the apparent thresholds of metaphysical and physical, transcendent and immanent, eternal and temporal" (p. 4). For Kickasola, this is the "same liminal ground that philosopher and critic George Steiner describes when he states that the arts are 'rooted in substance ... immanence,' but 'do not stop there'" (p. 5). We may begin with the human, but the presence of the "Other" demands we investigate. Kickasola finds that for this Polish director, metaphysics matters."

Ter herinnering


Tien geboden - Wikipedia
(zie aldaar voor verschillende vertalingen).

in Vlaamse versvorm klinkt het zo:

Bovenal bemin één God

Zweer niet ijdel, vloek noch spot

Heilig steeds de dag des Heren

Vader moeder zult gij eren

Dood niet, geef geen ergernis

Doe niets wat onkuisheid is

Vlucht het stelen en bedriegen

Ook de achterklap en het liegen

Wees steeds kuis in uw gemoed

Begeer nooit iemands goed

Wikipedie Engels:

I am the Lord your God

You shall have no other gods before me

You shall not make for yourself an idol

You shall not make wrongful use of the name of your God

Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy

Honor your Father and Mother

You shall not murder*

You shall not commit adultery

You shall not steal

You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor

You shall not covet your neighbor's house

You shall not covet your neighbor's wife

Review

"We live in the world lacking idea on itself": Krzysztof Kieslowski's Art of Film
Tadeusz Miczka in Kinema


Later they developed Dekalog (Decalogue, 1988- 1989), a series of ten feature films based on the idea of the ten commandments.(12) Decalogue brought its creators international fame while in Poland they were regarded as controversial artists since they did not "utter the name of God to misuse it."
K. Kieślowski: "[...] I think if there is anybody like God who created everything around, and us, too, I think we often get out of His hand. When you glance at the history of the world, our history, it can be easily seen how often we get out of hand."(13)

It can be said that Kieślowski looked for God but found him inside of people. He treated the plots in Decalogue as 'court files' presenting two opposing attitudes toward life. He did not divide his characters into those redeemed and the ones condemned. He transcribed sacred texts his own way; his stories can hardly be united with the Catholic doctrine in which the human fate is a part of mysterious divine intention.

In Decalogue I ("You shall have no gods before me") an extreme rationalist, who was not able to predict unplanned events, sustained a calamity. The man was sure that by using a computer he could properly calculate the thickness of the lake's ice, but his son drowned there. In Decalogue II ("You shall not utter the name of your God in vain") a young woman artist decided to give birth to a child conceived with her lover after the doctor had lied to her that her husband's death was unavoidable. The character of Decalogue III ("Remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy"), the adulterous husband left his lover on a Christmas Eve as he realized the motive of his behaviour. The character of Decalogue IV ("Honour your father and your mother"), a female ex- student, learnt she had an adoptive father. She searched with him for truth on their mutual feelings and wishes. In Decalogue V ("Thou shalt not kill") the director reminded the viewers that their attitude towards capital punishment is of crucial importance when they want to be a part of a civilized society.

Decalogue VI ("Thou shalt not commit adultery") was a story about the meeting of a shy teenager and a promiscuous young woman. The meeting changed their lives: The boy stopped believing in love while the girl realized its true value. Decalogue VII ("Thou shalt not steal") illustrated the rivalry between a mother and a grandmother over a child. Two female characters in Decalogue VIII ("Thou shalt not bear false witness against your neighbour"), an ethics professor and an elderly Jew, try to come to terms with the past (Nazi occupation) and explain the reasons why a Polish woman refused to help a Jewish child. Decalogue IX ("Thou shalt not covet your neighbour's wife") reveals the drama of an impotent cardiologist's jealousy of his wife's affair with a young man. In Decalogue X: ("Thou shalt not covet your neighbour's house or anything that is his") the characters were brothers wishing to enlarge inherited assets. One of them decided to swap his kidney for an invaluable postage stamp to complete a set. However, their greed was mocked by fate since during the operation in a hospital their house was robbed.

Kieślowski rarely illustrated the commandments (as in parts 1 and 5); he usually outlined their interpretation (in part 3), but most often he modified their traditional meaning (as in part 2 and 8). He did not hide his cognitive skepticism. He considered the events of each episode from a different perspective. By creating a character who appeared in each episode (performed by the same actor in different roles, such as a man with a ladder, suitcases or a boat) and situating all episodes into the same location (modern apartment subdivision), the author established a unified concept of the series. Gianni Buttafava was right when he wrote: "[...] the wish to give the series formal unity was honestly preserved: There is no highest will determining the events, or maybe there is, but each of us should find it for himself according to his faith."(14)

The plots of Decalogue avoided religious postulates and attitudes and as such they were not appreciated by Poles who were usually given dogmatic truths in the shape of a sermon or homily.

Decalogue 7

Movies as frontier: Kieslowski

40. Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieslowski's "Dekalog, siedem
(Decalogue 7)" (1989): Stealing as a metaphor


Commandments: tentative

Kieslowski on the mountaintop: ten commandments from the late Polish director - Krzysztof Kieslowski | Notes

It was never a question of photographing simple-minded illustrations of the commandments. Rather, by relating the commandments to contemporary situations, Kieslowski hoped to make them real. In fact, the explicit statement of a commandment is never used as a film's title; the viewer sees only an opening number: Decalogue 1, 2, 3, etc. The films do not pretend to provide answers, but to present questions. "We didn't want to adopt the tone of those who praise or condemn, handing out a reward here for doing good, and a punishment there for doing evil," Kieslowski wrote. "Rather, we wished to say, 'We know no more than you....But maybe it is worth investigating the unknown, if only because the very feeling of not knowing is a painful one.'"

This means that the relationship between the films and the individual commandments is "tentative." The moviegoer is forced to think. For example, instead of illustrating stealing with an action-packed bank robbery, Decalogue 7 deals with a mother who had previously forced her daughter - to whom she had never shown much affection - to sign over legal custody of her little girl (born out of wedlock), and now lavishes all her love on the granddaughter. In the course of the film the daughter runs away with the little girl. Is she "stealing" her own child (who has nightmares that only the grandmother seems able to soothe)? Or has the grandmother stolen the child's affection and trust? At the very least, the rights and wrongs of the situation are interrelated. The Decalogue does not present saints and villains; its characters are imperfect but never totally unsympathetic.

Dekalog Plot.

Dekalog IMDB

Dekalog. The Decalogue. Plot Outline.

Onderwijsproject Kieslowski

Thomas - Kieslowski en de bijbel: verhaal als ontmoeting van Luc Delaey. Een site en een boek.



Missie NTGent

NTGent | Vlaams Theater Instituut


NTGent wil een internationaal producerend stadstheater zijn, dat de dialoog met de samenleving aangaat. Theater moet midden in de wereld staan, om weerstand te bieden aan de veranderende werkelijkheid. NTGent staat voor theater dat scherp naar de samenleving kijkt, maar wel vol mededogen naar de mens die erin leeft. Daarom kiest NTGent ervoor om - naast het produceren van voorstellingen - actief deel te nemen aan het openbare debat over mens- en wereldbeelden. Zo wordt theater getransformeerd tot een open plek waar tijdgenoten - acteurs en toeschouwers - hun gedachten, angsten en dromen met elkaar delen.

Interview De Bijbel

Interview Matijs Jansen - MijnNL het stadsmagazine van NL

Interview n.a.v. van de nieuwe voorstelling van Wunderbaum met terugblik op de Tien Geboden.

Welk niveau?
“De meest interessante mensen die ik heb gesproken, hebben de bijbel als referentiekader om hun leven te toetsen. Ik dacht dat mensen de bijbel heel letterlijk namen. Maar het kan ook anders. Op een manier die meer aansluit bij mijn manier van leven.”

En nu ben je bekeerd?
“Nee, dat kan niet meer. Maar de christelijke waarden en normen zitten wel degelijk in mijn genen. Iedereen leeft een beetje volgens de tien geboden. Wij voelen ons ook schuldig als we vreemdgaan. Die tien geboden zijn niet eerst opgeschreven en daarna pas nageleefd. Het is iets van mensen en Mozes heeft ze toevallig ergens opgeschreven.”

Waarom een stuk maken over geloven?
“Er is een tendens om meer over geloof te praten. Volgens mij is dit in beweging gebracht doordat moslims vaak in de media komen. Als tegenbeweging krijgt ook het christendom meer aandacht. Misschien is het daarom ook wel dat CDA en Christen- Unie nu samen regeren. Ik denk dat je daar dan als theatermaker automatisch iets over wilt zeggen.”

Recensies

Volkskrantblog - Solvejg kijkt en schrijft - Op een racebaan langs de tien geboden

Volkskrant Blog

Op een racebaan langs de tien geboden

Geplaatst op 19-09-2007 21:20 door solvejg in categorie kunst
De tien geboden. In Rome zag ik ze op stenen tafelen in de handen van Mozes. Op 14 september, daags na de Nederlandse première, zag ik ze weer. Nu op het toneel van de Rotterdamse Schouwburg, in het kader van de Internationale Keuze. Nou ja, deel I heb ik gezien, de eerste vijf geboden. Volgend jaar volgt deel II. Johan Simons, de regisseur van NTGent, die de geboden op de planken brengt, heeft een reputatie op het gebied van het bewerken van boeken. Twee van Michel Houellebecq (Elementaire Deeltjes en Platform), waar hij drie voorstellingen op heeft gebaseerd. Nu is het de beurt aan films. In de jaren tachtig verfilmde Krzysztof Kieslowski de tien geboden. Tien films van ongeveer een uur waarin hij aan de hand van het thema van de tien geboden uit de Bijbel, menselijke dilemma's schetst.

Theatercentraal.nl Recensie.

Tien Geboden Wunderbaum - Tien geboden leidraad belangwekkend theater

NTGent

IN DE SCHADUW VAN HET LAM GODS ... brengt NTGent 'Tien Geboden'

Klokgelui weerklinkt bij het begin van de voorstelling. NTGent vervuld van een religieus gevoel? Misschien. Maar niet te vergeten: aan de andere kant van de schouwburg ligt het Belfort, symbool van wereldlijke macht. Op dat snijpunt liggen deze 'Tien Geboden', niet zoals we ze kennen van de stenen tafelen of uit de catechismusles maar van bij de Poolse cineast Krzysztof Kieslowski. Hij liet gebod en menselijke verantwoordelijkheid/onvolmaaktheid hand in hand gaan in zijn tv-reeks 'Dekalog', tien kortfilms waarin telkens een gebod gelinkt werd aan het wel en vooral wee van de bewoners in een grauw flatgebouw in Warschau. NTGent brengt dit seizoen vijf van die tien verhalen in een tweeënhalf uur durende voorstelling (volgend seizoen komen de andere vijf geboden aan bod en wordt een marathonversie opgevoerd).

Recensie

uit Urbanmag.



Het theaterseizoen van NTGent opent dit jaar met Tien geboden, of althans met het eerste deel ervan. De laatste vijf geboden zijn, samen met een afsluitende marathonvoorstelling, voorzien voor het seizoen 2008-2009. Het stuk is, na bijvoorbeeld ook Het leven een droom van vorig jaar, een nieuwe samenwerking tussen de vaste ploeg van het Gentse stadstheater en het jonge acteurscollectief Wunderbaum. Er bevinden zich dan ook gedurig veel mensen op scène: de acht acteurs vertolken, afwisselend per hoofdstuk en per gebod, bewoners van een appartementsgebouw, dat is ingebed in de stad die min of meer samenvalt met het publiek.

NTGENT Tien Geboden

De Poolse cineast Krysztof Kieslowski (Bleu, Blanc, Rouge) brak eind jaren ’80 door met de televisiereeks Dekalog/Tien geboden. Een reeks van tien korte films over herkenbare mensen op een keerpunt in hun leven. Ze kijken hun eigen zwakheid in de ogen en maken zich los van geboden die van op afstand zeggen hoe te leven.

NTGent en Wunderbaum presenteren deze reeks verhalen in twee delen. Het eerste deel, dat we dit seizoen spelen, omspant de eerste vijf geboden. De scène baadt in verblindend neonlicht. Goddelijk licht of de verstikkende beklemming van onvermijdelijke dilemma’s? We zien vijf verhalen van morele verontrusting, verteld en beleefd door de bewoners van eenzelfde mistroostig flatgebouw in Warschau. Verhalen over een ramp op het ijs, over het onverwachte bezoek van een minnares van vroeger, over de verwarrende liefde tussen een vader en zijn dochter,…

Johan Simons ensceneerde in 2005 al Die zehn Gebote in de Münchner Kammerspiele, en maakt nu een volledig nieuwe Nederlandstalige versie met NTGent-acteurs: de ploeg van Wunderbaum, aangevuld met Els Dottermans, Frank Focketyn en Oscar Van Rompay. Dit seizoen staat deel 1 op het programma, volgend seizoen komen daar de vijf volgende verhalen bij en kan je beide delen apart alsook de volledige Tien geboden-marathon bekijken.

Vóór elke voorstelling van Tien Geboden in NTGent (behalve voor de première) geeft een publiekswerker GRATIS een inleiding op de voorstelling. De inleiding begint om 19.30 op het foyerniveau (eerste verdieping) en duurt ca. 30 minuten.




naar_Krystof Kieslowski in samenwerking met Krysztof Piesiewicz

bewerking_Koen Tachelet

regie_Johan Simons

spel_Walter Bart, Wine Dierickx, Els Dottermans, Frank Focketyn, Matijs Jansen, Maartje Remmers, Marleen Scholten, Oscar Van Rompay

dramaturgie_Jeroen Versteele

decorontwerp_Bert Neumann

kostuumontwerp_An De Mol

lichtontwerp_Dennis Diels

productie NTGent|Wunderbaum met dank aan de Münchner Kammerspiele

zie verder uitgebreide informatie over de voorstelling op de website van NTGent

Kieslowski Info

Krzysztof Kieślowski - MovieMeter.nl

Geboren:
27 juni 1941, Warschau (Polen)

Overleden:
13 maart 1996, Warschau (Polen)

Er staan 23 films van deze regisseur op MovieMeter.

Krzysztof Kieślowski - Wikipedia

Krzysztof Kieslowski IMDB


Kino Kieslowski - Home

Dedicated to film director Krzysztof Kieslowski

Senses of Cinema
Krzysztof Kieslowski