Die Passagierin (1963)
27KDie Passagierin: Directed by Andrzej Munk, Witold Lesiewicz. With Aleksandra Slaska, Anna Ciepielewska, Jan Kreczmar, Marek Walczewski. While being aboard a transatlantic ship, German woman Liza notices someone who looks like Marta, the former inmate at Auschwitz, where Liza used to be the guard.
“Itu0026#39;s difficult to make an accurate assessment of this film because itu0026#39;s incomplete. In fact, itu0026#39;s far from complete. Still, from the pieces of what is left we can see that u0026quot;Passengeru0026quot; may well have turned out to be a masterpiece. Like Jean Vigo, Andrzej Munk was considered a cinematic genius who died too soon (in a car crash in 1960). Munk is less well known than Vigo but he is still important, especially in the development of Polish film. u0026quot;Passengeru0026quot; is the story of a German woman on a cruise-liner who catches a glimpse of who she believes to be a Jewish girl she was in charge of at a concentration camp during the war. She recounts to her husband in flashback the story of how she tried to protect the girl from her vicious captors. Later on though, in another flashback, we see what really happened: the woman was not the girlu0026#39;s protector, but a sadist who relished her position of authority and her control over the lives of the prisoners she guarded. The cruise-liner scenes are all done using still shots with a narrator (or, the u0026quot;restoreru0026quot; of the film) trying to decipher how exactly Munk intended to piece the film together, while the flashback scenes are actual moving images, shot in fine black and white widescreen compositions. As the u0026quot;narratoru0026quot; tries to understand the film, what it would have become, so do we as viewers. In this way the film itself becomes perhaps even more labyrinthine than it would have been had Munk completed it, and we have an added level of mystery that is as frustrating as it is exciting. The incomplete film entices us to guess how it would have turned out, and while its certainly not a substitute for the completed film, this fragmented u0026quot;Passengeru0026quot; is brilliant and tantalizing nonetheless.”