Filmmaker Roman Polanski, who as a boy growing up in Poland watched while the Nazis devastated his country during World War II, directed this downbeat drama based on the true story of a privileged musician who spent five years struggling against the Nazi occupation of Warsaw. Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody) is a gifted classical pianist born to a wealthy Jewish family in Poland. The Szpilmans have a large and comfortable flat in Warsaw which Wladyslaw shares with his mother and father (Maureen Lipman and Frank Finlay), his sisters Halina and Regina (Jessica Kate Meyer and Julia Rayner), and his brother, Henryk (Ed Stoppard). While Wladyslaw and his family are aware of the looming presence of German forces and Hitler's designs on Poland, they're convinced that the Nazis are a menace which will pass, and that England and France will step forward to aid Poland in the event of a real crisis. Wladyslaw's naïveté is shattered when a German bomb rips through a radio studio while he performs a recital for broadcast. During the early stages of the Nazi occupation, as a respected artist, he still imagines himself above the danger, using his pull to obtain employment papers for his father and landing a supposedly safe job playing piano in a restaurant. But as the German grip tightens upon Poland, Wladyslaw and his family are selected for deportation to a Nazi concentration camp. Refusing to face a certain death, Wladyslaw goes into hiding in a comfortable apartment provided by a friend. However, when his benefactor goes missing, Wladyslaw is left to fend for himself and he spends the next several years dashing from one abandoned home to another, desperate to avoid capture by German occupation troops. The Pianist was based on the memoir of the same name by the real-life Wladyslaw Szpilman; the book was first published in 1946 as Death of a City, but was banned by Polish Communist officials and went out of print until 1998, when a new edition was issued as The Pianist.
|
Adrien Brody | Wladyslaw Szpilman |
|
Emilia Fox | Dorota |
|
Michal Zebrowski | Jurek |
|
Ed Stoppard | Henryk |
|
Maureen Lipman | Mother |
|
Frank Finlay | Father |
|
Jessica Kate Meyer | Halina |
|
Julia Rayner | Regina |
|
Wanja Mues | SS Slapping Father |
|
Richard Ridings | Mr. Lipa |
|
Nomi Sharron | Feather Woman |
|
Anthony Milner | Man Waiting to Cross |
|
Lucy Skeaping | Street Musician |
|
Roddy Skeaping | Street Musician |
|
Ben Harlan | Street Musician |
|
Thomas Lawinky | Schutzpolizei |
|
Joachim Paul Assbock | Schutzpolizei |
|
Roy Smiles | Itzak Heller |
|
Paul Bradley | Yehuda |
|
Daniel Caltagirone | Majorek |
|
Andrzej Blumenfeld | Benek |
|
Darian Wawer | Child at the Wall |
|
Zbigniew Zamachowski | Customer with Coins |
|
Lejb Fogelman | Customer with Coins |
|
Detlev von Wangenheim | SS Officer |
| Director | Roman Polanski |
|
| Writer | Ronald Harwood, Wladyslaw Szpilman | |
| Producer | Robert Benmussa, Timothy Burrill, Daniel Champagnon, Gene Gutowski, Henning Molfenter, Roman Polanski, Lew Rywin, Alain Sarde, Rainer Schaper | |
| Musician | Wojciech Kilar | |
| Photography | Pawel Edelman | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
|---|---|
| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (1.85:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 ENGLISH: DTS 5.1 FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1 SPANISH: Dolby Digital Surround |
| Subtitles | French | Spanish |
| Distributor | Universal Studios |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | May 27, 2003 |
| Regions | Region 1 |