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All these sleepless nights
All these sleepless nights










all these sleepless nights

He finds another and his anger quickly diffuses. One steals his best friend’s girl but no worries. The young people studied here in a most unusual New Wave type of filming like to keep in motion. And what we like most to do is to relate to others of our own age, preferably face to face and not on those infernal smartphones. If brought up in a stable, middle-class home with no responsibilities for making a living, we can choose what we would like to do. Then again, maybe we should not use the term “ hedonistic.” As writer-director Micha? Marczak points out in a prologue, psychologists have discovered that what we remember most as we grow older is our experiences as adolescents and young adults. Watch these hedonistic Polish youths and you’ll realize that their country must have been run by Communists and Nazis only with the utmost governmental force.

ALL THESE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS MOVIE

A month from now, he certainly won’t feel the physical damage he’s inflicted upon himself here, but one imagines as the decades pass, he’ll look back with longing on the euphoric feelings captured here.Īll These Sleepless Nights premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival and opens on April 7, 2017.Photo from the movie All These Sleepless NightsĪLL THESE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS (Wszystkie nieprzespane noce)Ĭast: Krzystof Bagilski, Michal Huszcza, Eva Lebuef As we follow Kris’ self-absorbed journey, a memorable moment in which he dons a pink bunny suit and starts to think about those around him may seem foolish to an outsider, but it’s a leap ahead in his development. “All relationships start with injuries,” Kris says in early on in the film. In accentuating performance through movement, All These Sleepless Nights could be construed as a more polished Girl Walk // All Day, albeit with much more dialogue. One of the most interesting formal choices is a noticeable excursion into home video-esque footage for the film’s most intimate moments, as if we’re entering our protagonist’s mind for the the first time, separated from the glossy sheen that occupies the rest of life. Coupled with a near-constant soundtrack of the latest in electronic and pop (as well as a Polish version of Pocahontas‘ “Colors of the Wind”), one could mistake any scene from this as a music video, but as a whole it forms something cohesive. Using the combination of a Steadicam and computerized gimbal, Marczak floats in and out of crowded dance floors, house parties, lush gardens, and sun-kissed beaches, all in a way that would make Emmanuel Lubezki proud. Even with existential voice-over about the cumulative events in one’s life and drug-fueled talk of sex, partying, romance, and the future, it may eventually become rambling from a viewer’s perspective, but then again, one might have had these very same conversations as the sun comes up.

all these sleepless nights

One is occasionally reminded of the melodrama found within Gaspar Noé’s Love from last year - complete with cut-to-black fades, and ever-moving camera - but where that film felt artificial in its dialogue and performance, All These Sleepless Nights rarely loses its authenticity. Their relationship starts to flounder when Eva, Michal’s ex-girlfriend, re-enters their lives, this time finding a mutual attraction with Kris.

all these sleepless nights

“Playing” themselves, they glide through a dark Warsaw, illuminated by street lamps and the strobing lights from whatever party they stumble across, fearing nothing, walking through the middle of traffic and touching the side of trains as they zoom across. The main through-line, if one can even qualify it as such, follows Kris, who recently broke up with his girlfriend, and Michal, a twenty-something pair eager to find nightly amusement and perhaps some greater significance in their repetitive lives. Blurring the line between documentary and fiction like few films before it, Michal Marczak‘s All These Sleepless Nights is a music-filled ode to the ever-shifting bliss and angst of youth set mostly in the wee hours of the day in Warsaw, Poland. Marczak himself, who also plays cinematographer, is wary to delineate the line between narrative and nonfiction, and part of the film’s joy is forgoing one’s grasp on this altering perspective, rather simply getting wrapped up in the immaculately-shot allure of its location.












All these sleepless nights