Yellow Veil Pictures: The Hourglass Sanatorium (1973) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Yellow Veil Pictures

Surrealism is almost synonymous with all things Polish cinema related, from Jerzy Skolimowski’s The Shout to Piotr Szulkin’s Apocalypse Tetralogy and more recently The Lure from Agnieszka Smoczynska.  Utilizing dream or fragmented logic to evoke a subtle social critique of life under post-WWII communist rule in Poland, the efforts to push against affronts to creative expression resulted in a number of vivid yet uncategorizable tapestries taking viewers through the past to comment on the present.  Though films such as Andrzej Zulawski’s The Devil from 1972 faced immediate outright banning by the Polish government, that didn’t stop filmmakers like Wojciech J. Has from going against the grain with his seismic 1973 surrealist gargantuan The Hourglass Sanatorium. 
 
Loosely based on the short stories of Polish-Jewish novelist Bruno Schulz Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass, the film follows Joseph (Jan Nowicki from O-Bi, O-Ba: The End of Civilization), a young Jewish-Polish man who ventures out to visit his dying father Jakub (Tadeusz Kondrat) in a remote dilapidated sanatorium where time seems frozen and the lines between dream and reality are even less distinguishable than a David Lynch picture.  Finding his father in a place where no one seems to be in authority and the patients are perpetually neglected, our protagonist Josef finds himself tumbling down an ever-evolving rabbit hole of Jewish pasts and present, touching on his childhood past as he stumbles through wax museums, military units, open cityscapes rendered by magnificent production design all aide by am omniscient blind train conductor (Mieczysław Voit).

 
A close bedfellow to such surrealist Eastern European fare as Karen Shakhnazarov’s Zerograd or more recently Roy Andersson’s Songs from the Second Floor, The Hourglass Sanatorium is a beguiling promenade through dreamland and nightmarish woundings pointing to collective trauma over the Holocaust of WWII.  Much like eventual Ukrainian director Konstantin Luposhansky’s own Russian apocalypse tetralogy of sorts, the film joins one central character on his journey through seemingly bottomless portals that feel like real dreams and not just a screen or literary contrivance.  Though blocked in its country of origin, the director smuggled a print out of Poland to Cannes where it won a special jury prize, a move that effectively prevented him from mounting another film production in Poland for the next eight years.

 
Labyrinthine, evocative and having the feeling of free spontaneity, The Hourglass Sanatorium for all of its intentional, intricately designed and blocked squalor the film’s brilliant production design is lensed exquisitely by O-Bi, O-Ba: The End of Civilization cinematographer Witold Sobociński.  The soundtrack by Piotr Szulkin favorite Jerzy Maksymiuk is appropriately brooding and mournful, capturing the feeling of a world either in some form of purgatory or void forgotten by God.  The central performer Jan Nowicki makes the film’s protagonist as bewildered and frightened as we are with increasingly wild set pieces assaulting the viewer’s senses.  Much of the rest of the ensemble cast drifts in and out of Jozef’s hemisphere as he inexplicably teleports from one section of Jewish-Polish history to the next.  Special attention goes to an extended sequence of extras portraying mannequins in a wax museum, holding perfectly still mid-action as Jozef navigates the room.

 
While being something of a behemoth boasting astonishing production design and precise, ornate cinematography and editing, The Hourglass Sanatorium was suppressed by Polish authorities immediately.  Moreover, the country was experiencing an anti-semitic purge at the time of the very Jewish experience-oriented film’s inception and thus forbade the film’s entry into the Cannes film festival.  Despite this, Wojciech J. Has broke the embargo by sneaking a print to Cannes where Ingrid Bergman awarded it the special jury prize.  Not long after the film premiered in Poland but the director temporarily found himself unable to work on other projects. 

 
Years later Martin Scorsese’s Masterpieces of Polish Cinema project restored the film digitally for blu-ray disc release (albeit in Europe) before Vinegar Syndrome’s partner label Yellow Veil Pictures did their own standalone disc release featuring a booklet and limited slipcover.  On its terms, its like if Piotr Szulkin and Federico Fellini had an out of wedlock child with its own cocktail of squalid splendor, a ravishingly opulently ugly masterwork that’s as enchanting as it is repellent to behold.  Interest in the surreal Polish cinema director Wojciech J. Has as well as the film’s eventual canonization in the annals of the top ten greatest films of Polish film history has only bolstered the The Hourglass Sanatorium’s reputation as an unmissable masterwork of Eastern European phantasmagoria eagerly awaiting long overdue rediscovery.

--Andrew Kotwicki