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I Hate Mondays (film)

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I Hate Mondays
PolishNie lubię poniedziałku
Directed byTadeusz Chmielewski
Written byTadeusz Chmielewski
StarringKazimierz Witkiewicz
CinematographyMieczyslaw Jahoda
Edited byMaria Orłowska
Music byJerzy Matuszkiewicz
Production
company
Zespół Filmowy „Plan”
Release date
  • 27 August 1971 (1971-08-27)
Running time
100 min
CountryPolish PR
LanguagesPolish
Italian

I Hate Mondays (Polish: Nie lubię poniedziałku) is a 1971 Polish comedy film directed by Tadeusz Chmielewski.[1][2][3][4]

Plot

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The action of the film takes place on an unlucky Monday in Warsaw and focuses on episodes from the lives of a dozen or so characters. Italian industrialist Francesco Rovanelli (Kazimierz Witkiewicz), who comes to Warsaw with the intention of signing a lucrative contract, unexpectedly gets lost in a foreign city. A Milicja officer (Andrzej Herder) in charge of the movement has to take care of his little son, who, like other children, has not been admitted to the kindergarten because of the rubella that prevails there, and his wife (Joanna Kasperska), who works in a matrimonial office, cannot leave her job. The delegate of the commune cooperative (Jerzy Turek) is looking for a spare part for a combine harvester and argues with the impetuous taxi driver (Adam Mularczyk), and the drunk actor Bohdan Łazuka (appearing as himself) tries to get home, walking through the awakening Warsaw led by tram tracks, in which he stuck the crank to the car.[5]

Cast

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Reception

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I Hate Mondays was a box-office success.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Media and the Cold War in the 1980s: Between Star Wars and Glasnost. (2018:157). Germany: Springer International Publishing.
  2. ^ Haltof, M. (2018:436). Polish Cinema: A History. Germany: Berghahn Books.
  3. ^ "Nie lubię poniedziałku | Śródmieście w kadrze". Śródmieście Dzielnica m.st. Warszawy. 2023. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  4. ^ "I Hate Monday - Films - Studio Filmowe Kadr". sfkadr.com.
  5. ^ "FilmPolski.pl". FilmPolski (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-06-28.
  6. ^ Haltof, M. (2015:xxviii). Historical Dictionary of Polish Cinema. United Kingdom: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
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