
2005
Filmmaker Lech Kowalski explores his belief that struggle is "the epitome of living" in this documentary which compares the wildly different life experiences of himself and his mother. Kowalski's mother came of age in Poland during the early stages of World War II, and after failed attempts to outrun both Nazi and Russian forces she and her family were sent to a Soviet concentration camp, where inmates were tortured, mistreated, and starved to the point where some ate their own lice in a desperate struggle to survive. Kowalski also depicts his own self-inflicted season in hell during his years on the New York City punk rock scene as he wallowed in the sordid underbelly of drug addiction, pornography, prostitution, and streetwise decadence. On both stories, Kowalski finds a message of hope and strength in the midst of almost certain peril.

Maria Kowalski

People of Russia

Disgraced Monuments

The Balance Sheet of Siberia

Flying Supersonic

Rockin' Down The Curtain: The 60ies. Beginning

Summit on Ice

The Shaman

Perpetuum mobile. Raimonds Pauls

Mammoth

Gdud A'liyah

In Memory of Sergo Ordzhonikidze

Barbarossa: Hitler Turns East

Revolution: New Art for a New World

Children of Chernobyl

Strip and War

Osteuropa zwischen Hitler und Stalin - Das große Sterben

Journey to the East

Andrey Tarkovsky. A Cinema Prayer

Man with a Movie Camera

Soviet Union: The Rise and Fall - Part 1