Pawlina Carlucci Sforza

Historia

A graduate of the London College of Communication (University of Arts) and the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, she also studied at the Warsaw Film School and at Accademia Albertina delle Belle Arti in Turin. Her co-directing debut "Don't Judge" won the award for the Best Documentary Film and a nomination to the Best Polish Film Award at the Grand Off Festival (2017) and to the Jan Machulski Award in the category of the Best Direction (2018).

Películas

The Fear
Director of Photography
The communal memory of killings which took place following World War II in the Dębrzyna forest in south-east Poland, featuring accounts from those who witnessed the atrocities as children. It was a time when many people were returning from forced labour in Germany, with no idea that they might become victims of the attacks being perpetrated by the marauding bandits who had overrun the area. The residents of the nearby villages knew what was going on in the forest, yet never intervened because they were “living in fear” themselves.
The Fear
Writer
The communal memory of killings which took place following World War II in the Dębrzyna forest in south-east Poland, featuring accounts from those who witnessed the atrocities as children. It was a time when many people were returning from forced labour in Germany, with no idea that they might become victims of the attacks being perpetrated by the marauding bandits who had overrun the area. The residents of the nearby villages knew what was going on in the forest, yet never intervened because they were “living in fear” themselves.
The Fear
Director
The communal memory of killings which took place following World War II in the Dębrzyna forest in south-east Poland, featuring accounts from those who witnessed the atrocities as children. It was a time when many people were returning from forced labour in Germany, with no idea that they might become victims of the attacks being perpetrated by the marauding bandits who had overrun the area. The residents of the nearby villages knew what was going on in the forest, yet never intervened because they were “living in fear” themselves.