Moonlighting [DVD]

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Features
  • Type: DVD
  • Studio: eOne Films
  • Language(s): english
  • Director(s): Skolimowski, Jerzy
  • Actor(s): Irons, Jeremy, Lipinski, Eugene
Kudaj, Wolski and Banaszak, three Polish builders from Warsaw, arrive in England with their foreman, Nowak (Jeremy Irons) - the only one of them who speaks English - to renovate the Kensington home of a rich fellow Pole. They will be paid in hard currency, earning a year's Warsaw wages for a month of work in London. So they, and the owner of the house, are happy. The only problem is timing. It is December, 1981. The men camp out in the gutted house, putting in long hours on the building work. They shop at the local supermarket, amazed at the plentiful supply of food. Everything works according to the owner's plan until the military crackdown in Poland. Nowak is the only one who finds out and he makes the decision not to tell the other men. They would panic, the pace of work would slowdown and there's nothing anybody can do. They are stranded after all. Jeremy Irons gives a sleek, subtle, and gripping performance in the little-known gem Moonlighting (no relation to the popular TV series). Nowak (Irons) leads a small team of Polish building contractors, hired by a wealthy Pole to illegally refurbish his London home. They slip into England under false pretenses and squat in the house as they work on it--but shortly after they arrive, the military take over Poland and declare martial law (this real event happened in December of 1981). Only Nowak speaks English, so only he knows this has happened; fearing that if the others find out, they'll stop working, he decides not to tell them. As he starts stealing and scamming to stretch their rapidly vanishing money, Nowak grows increasingly paranoid and mentally fragile. Moonlighting is a political allegory and a psychological portrait, but thanks to Irons' sympathetic performance, the movie is also rivetingly suspenseful. Every time Nowak shoplifts, the tension--all the more intense for being such an ordinary circumstance--will make your skin crawl. Written and directed by Jerzy Skolimowski (who co-wrote the screenplay for Roman Polanski's debut film Knife in the Water), Moonlighting is a deceptively simple and potent film that deserves a wider audience. --Bret Fetzer