THE TOUCH OF AN ANGEL- a documentary film by
Marek Tomasz Pawlowski
(2015, 62′)
Thursday, March 12 at 8 pm.
Friday, March 13 at 8 pm.
Saturday, March 14 at 7 & 8:30 pm.
Sunday, March 15 at 3 & 5 pm.
Gallery Theatre
The Society for Arts
1112 North Milwaukee Ave., Chicago
This poetic documentary is the personal story of Henryk Schonker, a Jew from the town of Oswiecim, renamed Auschwitz by the Nazis. In 1939, his father was the chairman of the Jewish community, whose task was to organize the Bureau of Emigration of Jews to Palestine, at the behest of the German military authorities. This was several months before the idea of the creation of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp. This chance for legal immigration to save thousands of people has been completely unknown to the world at large. It poses difficult questions of timeless significance: had Western countries been willing to accept Jewish refugees, how many could have been saved?
The film is a creative documentary whose style director Marek Tomasz Pawlowski has coined archicollage. It is a kind of journey into the past, creating short, silent impressions with imaginative staging and stylized use of archival material. The artistic language of the film escorts the contemporary viewer through the six years of World War II. The director combines different types of combines different types of visuals, experimenting as he had previously with his own signature style in the documentary portrait, The Runaway, winner of thirteen awards in competitions from Moscow to New York. In The Touch of an Angel, he re-creates copyrighted, archival realities by using actors and extras – Oswiecim’s own inhabitants. Schonker mesmerizes the viewer with his extraordinary memory and energy. The now deaf Jew who has been living in Tel Aviv explores many crucial and previously unknown facts and figures. These include his wartime encounter with John Gottowt, an actor from Murnau’s movie Nosferatu.
The film is in Polish with English subtitles.
Tickets are available by calling (773) 486-9612, on www.societyforarts.com, onBrownPaperTickets.com or in the theatre’s box-office before the screenings.
Donation: $10.00
The screenings are possible in part thanks to a generous support from The Ministry of Culture of Poland, Polish Television TVP and the Society for Arts.