Nothing can shake investigating magistrate Janusz so easily. He lives for his work. But the abyss he looks into every day has left him cold. So much so that he is helpless in the face of his anorexic daughter Olga, who is still mourning the death of her mother. That's why therapist Anna is supposed to find a way to Olga with art and scream therapy. But Anna herself is suffering from a loss and has been holed up with her big dog in a tightly sealed-off apartment ever since, conjuring up the spirits of the deceased as a medium at night ... In BODY, Polish director Małgorzata Szumowska weaves together the complex life stories of three profoundly different people. The film, which is infused with elements of black comedy, questions the boundaries between life and death, body and soul and the way we deal with loss. Małgorzata Szumowska poses the question of whether it is possible to maintain a connection with those who have left us through death. BODY vividly shows how these three characters each try to make peace with the shadows that death has cast in their lives, each struggling in their own way to heal or at least understand. The film, which won the Silver Bear for Best Director at the Berlinale, is characterized by its harsh yet sensitive portrayal of human weaknesses and its multifaceted approach to the subject of grief. “Body” is a cinematic experience that challenges and fascinates viewers in equal measure, exploring deep human fears and longings in a society that often ignores or taboos death.
Olga, who is grieving for her mother and also anorexic, is sent to a psychiatrist who is dealing with her own losses in an unusual way.
Nothing can shake investigating magistrate Janusz so easily. He lives for his work. But the abyss he looks into every day has left him cold. So much so that he is helpless in the face of his anorexic daughter Olga, who is still mourning the death of her mother. That's why therapist Anna is supposed to find a way to Olga with art and scream therapy. But Anna herself is suffering from a loss and has been holed up with her big dog in a tightly sealed-off apartment ever since, conjuring up the spirits of the deceased as a medium at night ...
In BODY, Polish director Małgorzata Szumowska weaves together the complex life stories of three profoundly different people. The film, which is infused with elements of black comedy, questions the boundaries between life and death, body and soul and the way we deal with loss. Małgorzata Szumowska poses the question of whether it is possible to maintain a connection with those who have left us through death. BODY vividly shows how these three characters each try to make peace with the shadows that death has cast in their lives, each struggling in their own way to heal or at least understand.
The film, which won the Silver Bear for Best Director at the Berlinale, is characterized by its harsh yet sensitive portrayal of human weaknesses and its multifaceted approach to the subject of grief. “Body” is a cinematic experience that challenges and fascinates viewers in equal measure, exploring deep human fears and longings in a society that often ignores or taboos death.