Ida, by the Polish director Pawel Pawlikowski, has a harsh, spare lyricism, like Bertolt Brecht’s poetry; the camera set-ups are simple, basic, but the framing is unconventional, jarring until you get used to it, though Lukasza Zal’s lighting is lovely. You feel chilled and bruised while you’re watching and shaken up afterwards, but your vision is clearer. The setting is Poland in the early sixties. Agata Trzebuchowska plays Anna, an orphan raised in the convent who’s now about to take her vows; the Mother Superior at her convent (Halina Skoczynska) urges her first to visit the aunt she’s never known – who refused to adopt her when her parents died – before she becomes a nun. So she shows up at the door of this woman, Wanda Gruz (Agata Kulesza), who tells Anna that she’s really a Jew named Ida Lebenstein whose parents, Wanda’s sister Roza and her husband, were killed in the Holocaust. Wanda has a brusque manner but she isn’t unkind to her niece; she offers her food and money (both of which Anna refuses). And on their second meeting, after she returns from work – she’s a judge – she’s warmer and more welcoming, showing the girl family photos and talking about her mother. Anna wants to visit her parents’ graves but Wanda says there are none and that she doesn’t even know how they died, but she agrees to drive the girl to the rural area where they disappeared. “What if you go up there and discover there’s no God?” she asks, playfully. She’s amused by this sweet, innocent Jewish girl who’s preparing to become a nun.
Kulesza is a superb actress, and in the course of the journey we find out a great deal about Wanda – that she’s alcoholic and that her only sexual relationships seem to be with men she picks up at bars when she’s drinking, that she fought in the Resistance and that after the war she became a person of some importance in the Communist regime, one of the judges presiding at the show trials in the early fifties. (She retains enough status to get released from jail – with an apology – when she’s arrested for drunk driving after she gets them into a minor accident.) And when, with some difficulty, they locate Szymon (Jerzy Trek), the farmer who hid Anna’s parents, we learn that Wanda had a little boy whom she left with her sister when she went off to fight and who perished along with her and her husband; it takes some time before we learn exactly what happened to them, and why Anna herself survived.
Agata Kulesza and Agata Trzebuchowska in Ida |
Like The Missing Picture, Rithy Panh’s documentary, released early in the year, about his experience of living in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge – which employs wooden dolls as figures for the victims of the Kampuchean Revolution, to signify the absence of historical images – nothing in Ida feels like anything you’ve seen in another movie. The scene where the two women locate the site where their family is buried is amazing – somehow abrasive and delicate at the same time. The only moment that didn’t work for me was the final one, a long take of Anna walking along the road. Pawlikowski’s point must be that her future is undecided, but considering that she’s just opted for the regulated (and nearly silent) life of the convent, where all decisions are made for her, the image doesn’t match. The director seems to want to retain a kind of open-endedness about his protagonist, but this isn’t The Nun’s Story, Fred Zinnemann’s 1959 film about a nun (Audrey Hepburn) who, stirred up by her experience of the world during the Second World War, reneges on her commitment to the religious life. (That movie ends, memorably, with the main character walking out into the street while the camera remains behind in the convent room where she abandoned her uniform.) Pawlikowski wants to have it both ways at the end: he closes off his protagonist’s choices yet wants us to feel that she’s not yet formed. But what can ever form her if not what we’ve seen her go through in the course of the picture?
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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