proszę o recenzje filmu ,, pianista" po angielsku , proszę także aby to nie było napisane przez tłumacza .. Pozdrawia potrzebuje to na teraz
" Life is not a problem to be solved but a reality to be experienced! "
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In September 1939, Władysław Szpilman, a Polish-Jewish pianist is playing on Polish State radio in Warsaw when it is bombedduring Nazi Germany's invasion of Poland at the outbreak of World War II. Hoping for a quick victory, Szpilman rejoices with family when learning that Britain and France have declared war. But Germany defeats Poland in just over a month. Very quickly life for Jews deteriorate as the Nazi authorities prevent them working or owning businesses, and force them to wear Star of David armbands.
By November 1940, Szpilman and his family have been forced from their home into the overcrowded Warsaw Ghetto where conditions only get worse. People starve, the guards are brutal and corpses are left in the streets. On one occasion, the Szpilmans witness theSS kill an entire family during a Łapanka (raid) in an apartment building across the street. In the summer of 1942, the family aredeported to Treblinka extermination camp but Szpilman is saved at the Umschlagplatz by a friend in the Jewish Ghetto Police.
Szpilman becomes a slave labourer working on the "Aryan" side, where he survives a random mass execution. Szpilman learns of a coming Jewish revolt and helps by smuggling weapons into the ghetto, narrowly avoiding a suspicious guard. He then manages to escape and goes into hiding with help from non-Jewish friend Andrzej Bogucki and his wife Janina. In April 1943, Szpilman observes the rise and fall of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising from his window near the ghetto wall. A year goes by and Szpilman is forced to flee after a neighbor discovers him. In a second hiding place provided to him, he is shown into a room with a piano but forced to keep quiet, and suffers jaundice.
In August 1944, the Polish resistance attack a German building across the street from Szpilman's hideout in Ochoto district during the Warsaw Uprising. A tank shells his apartment forcing him to flee and hide elsewhere. Over the course of the next months the city is destroyed and emptied of the population. Szpilman is left to search desperately for shelter and supplies among the ruins. In one house, he is discovered by the Wehrmacht officer Wilm Hosenfeld, who learns that Szpilman is a pianist. Asked to perform by the German, the decrepit Szpilman plays Ballade in G minor on a grand piano. Hosenfeld, who was moved by the music, allows Szpilman to hide in the attic of the empty house. Over the coming months, the German officer regularly brings him food.
In January 1945, the Germans are forced to retreat due to the advance of the Red Army. Hosenfeld meets Szpilman for the last time promising he will listen to him on Polish Radio after the war. He gives Szpilman his greatcoat to keep warm and leaves. However this act has almost fatal consequences for Szpilman because he is mistaken as a German and shot at by Polish troops liberating Warsaw.
In Spring 1945, former inmates of a Nazi concentration camp pass a Soviet prisoner-of-war camp holding captured German soldiers and verbally abuse them. One ex-prisoner says he used to be a violinist. On hearing this, the captured Hosenfeld asks the violinist if he knows Szpilman, which the violinist confirms. The German asks if Szpilman can return the favor. Later the violinist brings Szpilman back to the site but it is only a grassy field.
Later, Szpilman performs Chopin's Grand Polonaise brillante to a large and prestigious audience.
An epilogue states that Szpilman died at the age of 88 in 2000 while Hosenfeld died in Soviet captivity in 1952.