Robert Talarczyk

Robert Talarczyk

Nacimiento : 1968-01-21, Katowice, Polska

Perfil

Robert Talarczyk

Películas

Black Mill
Karol's Father
Twelve-year-old Iwo lives in a small, post-communist town that is home to the old and destroyed Black Mill – once a place of work for many parents. Breaking the promise to not approach the old mill, the children accidentally unleash its evil powers. From that moment, nothing will ever be the same again as people and things start to disappear.
Mug
Jacek's brother-in-law
Jacek gasta pintas de rebelde y escucha a Metallica en un pueblo polaco de misa diaria, gris como un dolor de postguerra y en pleno milagro arquitectónico: construir un Cristo a escala del Corcovado de Brasil. Y en esas están cuando Jacek, trabajándole la cabeza al Jesucristo, cae dentro de ella y se destroza la cara. Ahora hay que rehacérsela, si bien los médicos confían más en la voluntad de Dios que en el bisturí, y Dios parece que el día de la operación está de broma.
The Traffic Department
Seven policemen, seven deadly sins, a murder case, secrets and the filth of everyday police work: Traffic Department transports the viewer into the darkest Warsaw streets.
Ewa
Leon
U Pana Boga w ogródku
Buncol, kapitan CBŚ
U Pana Boga w ogrodku (In God's Little Garden) is the sequal to U Pana Boga za piecem (1998). The story takes place in a small town called King's Bridge in eastern Poland. The town has beautiful rolling hills and is absolutely picturesque. The two most prominent men in the town are the police chief and the priest. While the chief tries to keep things safe the priest keeps all things spiritual in check.
St. Barbara's Day
Andrzej
A coal mine director invites Jacob, a TV series star, to add splendor to the celebration of St. Barbara's Day, the patroness of miners. Basia, a worker from the sorting department, is chosen to hand Jakub the welcoming loaf of bread. The two completely different worlds come together: flashy, success oriented strangers from Warsaw and traditional, modest and unwilling to change Silesians.