The Story of Sin (1975) Poster

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7/10
Story of a Sin: more than a moral tale, a portrait of turn of the century Polish society
clivy24 February 2016
Story of a Sin should be appreciated as more than a moral tale featuring abundant nudity and open depictions of sexuality. In addition to conveying a taste of Polish society at the turn of the last century, it's also an impressive production of 1970s Polish cinema, and reminiscent of Wajda's The Maidens of Wilko and The Promised Land.

I want to add my impressions about the movie as a female viewer. It reminded me of many other European films made in the 1970s that were publicized by ads that showed a naked woman in an embrace with a fully clothed man. There is a lot of nudity of Story of A Sin: nearly all of it is the lead actress showing her bare breasts and behind. In the scene with the nobleman both are shown fully nude, and there are some shots showing his flaccid genitals, but they're less than a minute long.

That said, the film's story is an old fashioned one warning that after the first sin, it's a long slide down to the gutter. By getting involved with Lukasz, a man seeking a divorce, young Ewa ends up estranged from her family, working in a sweatshop in a small town. After Lukasz departs for Rome in order to try to secure his divorce Ewa finds herself pregnant and abandoned. She learns that Lukasz has been jailed in Italy for forgery and theft. She gives birth alone, kills her baby, then steals money from her kind Jewish landlord. With the help of a nobleman, one of Lukasz's friends, she travels to Italy to find Lukasz, but the prison guards tell her he has been released and has left the country. While looking for him in France she hears that Lukasz has married a wealthy woman. She sinks into prostitution. Then a man who has been stalking Ewa attacks her and she drifts into a life posing as the man's wife, helping him and his henchmen con and rob others. She is forced to participate in a con that traps her nobleman friend; she kills him while he is making love to her. She escapes from the criminals thanks to the help of a reforming Count who takes her to his estate which he has converted into a refuge for fallen women. He gives an interview to reporters saying how he wants to promote reforms for Poland- I could see in this scene. why the then Communist Polish Government approved of the film. But Ewa is seduced back to her life with the criminals by one of the henchmen (who looks like Erich von Stroheim) telling her he has been sent by Lukasz to find her.

The film may feature sex, violence and nudity but it is very moral, and seems to lavishly portray Ewa's degradation as a warning to everyone - especially young girls- that one sin can lead to a sorry story of destruction. As well as being a cautionary tale, its a portrait of Polish life in the early 1900s, when Poland was not an independent country. Warsaw and the areas of today's Eastern Poland were under Russian rule ( other sections of today's Poland were then part of Germany and the Austrian Hungarian empire). The costumes, sets, and scenery are lush, and give an rich impression of life for the wealthy, the gentry, the working middle classes like Ewa's parents, and the poor, like Ewa's co workers in the offices and clothing sweatshop. The government probably encouraged the frank depiction of the seamier aspects of Polish life under the Czar (His portrait is displayed prominently in the offices where Ewa works as a copier). The film doesn't hold back in showing violence, the restrictions of the copiers' lives by their manager (he refuses to give Ewa the day off so she can visit Lukasz, who she's just learned has been wounded in a duel with the nobleman, so she abandons her job on the spot), the vulgarity of the girls in the sweatshop, and the poverty in Warsaw and in the small towns. In one scene in a tavern a waitress covers a table with doilies made of folded and cut newspaper pages. The film doesn't follow Party lines completely. It arouses empathy for noblemen like Eva's admirer, people with titles and estates but little money. It was heartening seeing a sympathetic portrayal of the Jewish landlord.

The scenes of the countryside are glorious. I recognised Warsaw locations in several shots, particularly Łazienki Park. There is much to delight the eye and much to enjoy in the Story of a Sin: it gives the viewer more to ponder than the consequences of sins of the flesh.
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7/10
The Return of Polish Cinema
gavin694211 April 2017
A young woman (Grazyna Dlugolecka) is used and abused by several men.

Director Walerian Borowczyk, the "genius who also happened to be a pornographer", had already made an award-winning short film ("Dom") and stunned the world by this time with "Immoral Tales" (1973) and its follow-up "The Beast" (1975). Showing just how low an artist could sink for his art, what was the director going to do next? And would actress Grażyna Długołęcka be brave enough to follow his lead?

"Story of Sin" was quite Polish, in contrast to the director's primarily French work. In fact, the story was adapted from an unloved Polish novel ("Wages of Sin") by the otherwise popular novelist Stefan Żeromski (1864-1925). Poland was (and is) a deeply Roman Catholic country, and the film is not without some religious overtones. Eve is said to be "the first sinner" and we know the director liked to use "religion as a way to express erotic behavior".

Strangely, although the women in his films are clearly being exploited and his films are rightly described as exploitation, the argument has been made that in many ways the women of the films get the upper hand or have free agency -- perhaps they make poor choices or are in bad situations, but they are not merely passive. This fact makes these films actually, dare we say, feminist. "Story of Sin" is an interesting ethical mix; the lead makes questionable choices (leading to prostitution and abortion), but for a very admirable reason -- she is tracking down her true love. Can we fault her for her choices? And can we fault the director for showing a strong woman making such hard choices?

The 2017 Blu-ray from Arrow Video is packed ridiculously full. We have an audio commentary by the impressively knowledgeable Samm Deighan and Kat Ellinger, best known for their Daughters of Darkness podcast. There is a new introduction by poster designer Andrzej Klimowski and a new interview with lead actor Grazyna Dlugolecka. Furthermore, film critic David Thompson talks on the use of classic music in Borowczyk's films; Daniel Bird presents a video essay concerning the director's obsessions; there is a video essay on Borowczyk and Lenica's contributions to newsreels and documentaries on art history; a short news reel documentary about poster art co-written by Borowczyk; an interview with Juliusz Zamecznik, son of photographer and graphic artist Wojciech Zamecznik; and an interview with poster artist Teresa Byszewska.

Those hours of bonus content not enough for you? Arrow even threw in 2K restorations from the original negatives of Borowczyk's ground-breaking Polish shorts: "Once Upon a Time" (co-directed by Jan Lenica), "Dom" (co-directed by Lenica) and "The School", each with optional audio commentaries. It is nigh impossible to imagine a greater tribute to the work of Borowczyk in video form.
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7/10
turbulent story and some ravishing visuals
christopher-underwood30 July 2020
A well shot and very good looking film with good performances particularly that of the female lead Grazyna Dtugotecka. As with several of the films of Walerian Borowczyk, however, part of the charm is the idiosyncratic pacing. Some films are more subject to this than others, seeming, an almost arbitrary mix of very slow sequences and speeded up ones barely allowing enough time for the viewer to absorb the goings on. The director's, The Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne issues this technique to marvellous effect but here it can be distracting and with the film already rather lengthy, perhaps something that could be done without. Nevertheless this is entertaining enough and covers much ground from the young girl's virginal confession and through love and hate, motherhood and murder, robbery and rape, prostitution and more. If the film is a little overlong there is much to enjoy with a turbulent story and some ravishing visuals
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Borowczyk - The Best, Not The Beast
dwingrove25 March 2003
Anyone who thinks of Walerian Borowzyk as a purveyor of upmarket smut for the wet raincoat brigade (Immoral Tales, The Beast, La Marge) is in for a shock if they see Story of Sin. A tragic 19th century romance, based on a Polish literary classic, it's in the grand 'woman destroys herself for love' tradition of Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Anna Karenina or Madame Bovary...although our heroine Ewa (Grazyna Dlugolecka) has a more eventful life than all three of those ladies combined! The sheltered daughter of an impoverished and decaying noble family, she moves from illicit passion with a married man to infanticide, prostitution and murder.

Yet if the details of Ewa's story are sensational, Borowczyk's handling of them never is. The sex and nudity are brief and oblique - all the more powerful for being conveyed in sharp flashes of visual poetry. At their first meeting, Lukasz (Jerzy Zelnik) glimpses Ewa's corset as it hangs, discarded, on a bedpost. In one night-time encounter, the couple make love in a horsedrawn cab, lit by bursts of lightning from an oncoming storm. In the most famous image, Ewa lies alone on her bed - her naked body strewn with rose petals from a bouquet Lukasz has sent in secret. Reminders, if any are needed, that Borowczyk has the most ravishing erotic eye this side of von Sternberg.

For both these directors, the censorship imposed by a Puritanical regime - the Production Code in 30s Hollywood, Communism and the Catholic Church in 70s Poland - forced overt sexuality off the screen and into the (well-trained) imagination of the audience. Rather than focus on boobs, bums and 'money shots,' Borowczyk suffuses his whole screen with stifled eroticism and tragic passion. Most likely his masterwork, Story of Sin not only evokes memories of Sternberg and Ophuls, but can sit comfortably on the classics shelf beside them.

And nary a masturbating nun or ejaculating monster in sight...

David Melville
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4/10
Moderate
majdo00718 September 2015
People either praise this film or rate it very low. Unfortunately, I was bored with this production. In a way, there are plenty of events here, but you get the impression that several stories were cut out from something and directly glued together without any explanation what happened between them. Those pieces are joined together by leading female character but sometimes it feels like the other characters popped out randomly. I do not understand this but plenty of things happen and there are hardly interesting to follow. The novel by Żeromski was not that long and the film is quite lengthy. Nonetheless, it could possibly be better when converted to miniseries, obviously with some extensions to understand the motives and suffering of the main character (compare Lalka film and series). Disappointing, but I would not discourage from seeing and making one's own opinion about it.
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10/10
"Avoid things which may be charming outside,but filthy inside."
morrison-dylan-fan17 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Having found in the past that Arrow put out seperate releases for other films by directors they have done dedicated sets for,I decided to check for this film maker. Pleased to find they had put out another of his works,I sat down for a tale.

View on the film:

Matching the care shown for the film makers work in their earlier set, Arrow present a fantastic transfer,with the sharp soundtrack and crisp print being backed by extensive, detailed extras.

The only time he made a live action film in his home country of Poland, directing auteur Walerian Borowczyk crosses visual motifs and a major recurring theme in his works,within the opening shot, as a distorted Ewa is lectured to about sin by a self-important priest.

Breaking a run he had been on in being the editor of his own projects, with editor Lidia Pacewicz brilliantly entering the role,whose measured cuts keep the surrealist flourishes held as part of the wider picture of Ewa's life. Closely working with cinematographer Zygmunt Samosiuk, Borowczyk reveals a refined eye that gazes on a passionate Melodrama atmosphere of graceful long tracking shots gliding to the lowest depths Ewa's life hits,in an irresistible, romantic final shot.

Carrying a heaviness of following Ewa's troubled life (with Ewa being the latest in Borowczyk's major theme of a woman being the lead in his works) Borowczyk continues to build on his surrealist stylisation, with a excellent framing of Ewa's conversations reflected in objects and taking place behind closed doors creating a vision of seeing Ewa in her most private moments.

Wearing Ewa's life in only her second feature film, Grazyna Dlugolecka gives a incredible, subtly expressive performance as Ewa, whose bleak, brittleness from the horrors inflicted on her being placed by Dlugolecka on top of the faint hope Ewa holds by her fingertips,of discovering a happy ending in her story of sin.
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