Jacek Knopp

Most Popular Jacek Knopp Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Wynajmę pokój... Trailer (1994)

20 April 1994

Under the influence of a boy she met, a student rebels against the old man with whom she lives.

I Remember Trailer (2002)

01 January 2002

Weaves together the personal recollections of four Polish survivors of the Holocaust with original footage from the present day.

On the Edge - Witold K. Trailer (2023)

28 May 2023

Witold Kaczanowski is one of Poland’s best-known artists, much more famous abroad than in his country of origin.

Zapaleńcy. Historia polskiego filmu animowanego Trailer (2025)

12 May 2025

Norymberga Trailer (2006)

11 December 2006

The play by Wojciech Tomczyk. The topic taken up by Wojciech Tomczyk is a very hot one, dealing with the still painful settlements with the People's Republic of Poland, the problem of victims and executioners, entangled in the communist and post-communist system.

Dziennik pisany pod wulkanem Trailer (1995)

01 January 1995

A kind of film essay on the life and work of Gustav Herling-Grudzinski. The writer's story about his life is interspersed with documentary footage shot in Naples, where he has lived for thirty years (hence the title), and in Warsaw, during a visit to Poland in 1994.

Trwoga Trailer (1993)

01 January 1993

Collective heroes of the film: men, women from across the eastern border. Belarusians, Russians. In Poland they found a chance for a better existence.

I powiesz - Jestem Trailer (1994)

01 January 1994

Julian Stryjkowski, writer and philosopher, author of the novels "Bieg do Fragala" (The Run to Fragal), "Pożegnanie z Italią" (Farewell to Italy), "Głosy w ciemności" (Voices in the Dark), "Czarna róża" (The Black Rose), "Austeria" (The Inn), "Wielki strach" (The Great Fear), "Odpowiedź" (The Answer), and "King David Lives," recalls his childhood and his first literary experiences.

Na podobieństwo Jacka Trailer (2000)

01 January 2000

"If God had had more experience with man, he would have created him in Jack's likeness." These words of Lechoslaw Gozdzik, the legendary leader of the Żerań workers in October 1956, may seem blasphemous to many.