FILM REVIEW
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A fatal sexually transmitted disease is probably not the way most
Southern Californians describe life. New Yorkers, maybe. Some Poles
apparently do, as proven in Krzysztof Zanussi’s “Life as a Fatal Sexually
Transmitted Disease.”
The film tells the story of Tomasz (Zbigniew Zapasiewicz,) an aging
physician, who is confronted with his own mortality when he finds out
that he has cancer.
Years of exposure to death through his work seem to have numbed
Tomasz’s feelings and he shocks those closest to him with his detached
descriptions of rotting inside.
But at the same time, he’s clearly struggling to accept the fact that
his days are numbered.
“As the English say, ‘We’re all in the same boat,”’ he tells the
mother of one of his dying patients. “But still I try to paddle
upstream.”
Disgruntled and cynical, Tomasz begins to flirt with religion and
tries to make up for his indifference to those who care about him as he
nears death.
If you’re looking for a nice and comforting afternoon at the movies,
this film is probably not going to do the trick. But it does do a good
job conveying that even the most blase people among us eventually realize
that there’s more to us than just a fatal disease.
Get ready for a dark 99 minutes. And when it’s over, there’s always
the possibility for a walk on the beach.
o7 “Life as a Fatal Sexually Transmitted Disease” will screen 4:30
p.m. Wednesday at Edwards Island 7 Cinemas.
f7
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