A Generation () is a 1955 Polish film directed by Andrzej Wajda. It is based on the novel Pokolenie by Bohdan Czeszko, who also wrote the script. It was Wajda's first film and the opening installment of what became his Three War Films trilogy set in the Second World War, to be followed by Kanaà  and Ashes and Diamonds.
A Generation is set in Wola, a working-class section of Warsaw, in 1942 and tells the stories of two young men at odds with the German occupation of Poland. The young protagonist, Stach (Tadeusz à Âomnicki), is living in squalor on the outskirts of the city and carrying out wayward acts of theft and rebellion.
After a friend is killed attempting to heist coal from a German supply train, he finds work as an apprentice at a furniture workshop, where he becomes involved in an underground communist resistance cell. He is guided first by a friendly journeyman there, who in turn introduces Stach to the beautiful Dorota (Urszula Modrzyà Âska). An outsider, Jasio Krone (Tadeusz Janczar), the temperamental son of an elderly veteran, is initially reluctant to join the struggle but finally commits himself, running relief operations in the Jewish ghetto during the uprising there.
The first film of Wajda's âÂÂfamous war trilogyâÂÂ, A Generation, was his debut directorial effort at age twenty-seven. Under the influence of the Italian neorealists, Wajda and his production team routinely shot outdoor sequences in less than optimal light and weather conditions, violating earlier Polish production precepts. Wajda recalled:
Because at the time it wasn't possible to adapt machine guns to shoot blanks, all shots of automatic weapons were done with live ammunition shot into sandbags off-screen.
A Polish film production executive reviewing the completed film was troubled by some of the brutal depictions of violence, and additionally, that the hero is portrayed as a disaffected proletariat. Despite these objections, A Generation was approved for release. It opened in Warsaw on January 25, 1955.
Though Wajda would soon be recognized as a leading figure in the Polish Film School, the reaction to his debut picture was âÂÂgenerally cool.â The influence of neorealism was widely noted disapprovingly as a departure from Polish âÂÂorthodox cinematic treatments."
Bohdan CzeszkoâÂÂs autobiographical novel Pokolenie, on which the film is based, concerns his activity in the armed resistance associated with the communist Polish Workers' Party (PPR) against Nazi occupation forces during World War II. Wajda, a member of the PPR since 1948, had at the time of his application to the à Âódà º Film School in 1950 declared: âÂÂBeside talent and a sense of reality, a film director must have a Marxist attitude towards life and art.âÂÂ
Historians Dorota Niemitz and Stefan Steinberg write:
Biographer Boleslaw Michalek notes that âÂÂin one of the tenantsâ of the late Stalinist era A Generation depicts Polish nationalists âÂÂcollaborating almost overtlyâ with the German occupiers. He adds:
A box set of the Three War Films was released by The Criterion Collection. A Generation includes an exclusive interview with the director and film critic Jerzy Pà Âaà ¼ewski, as well as Wajda's 1951 film school short Ceramics from Ià Âà ¼a (Ceramika Ià Âà ¼ecka), production photos, publicity stills, posters, and original artwork by the director and an essay by film scholar Ewa Mazierska.