madmanmunt wrote:K on K is a great read even if you don't like his films. Just the bit about him getting out of going into the army is worth it.
This is an excellent story!
To get out of the army, he went for an interview with an ary psychiatrist (I think) and was asked about what he had done the other day. Kieslowski then talked described how he had replaced a plug in his flat in minute detail: "first I went to my toolbox to find the right screwdriver, then..." Just describing how he replaced a plug managed to persuade the authorities that he was mentally unfit for service.
I don't find his outlook bleak. On the contrary, I feel his films represent a certain strain of tender humanism
Fair point. I mean to say that his personal outlook was bleak, which filtered into his style of representation. But you're right, his films do hold out a lot of hope and humanism, which gives them a balance. Life is hard and full of impossible questions, but it is manageable, and can be beautiful.