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Katyń (film)

Katyń
Katyn movie poster.jpg
Polish release poster
Directed by Andrzej Wajda
Produced by Michał Kwieciński
Written by Andrzej Wajda
Przemysław Nowakowski
Based on Post Mortem: The Story of Katyn
by Andrzej Mularczyk
Starring Maja Ostaszewska
Danuta Stenka
Artur Żmijewski
Paweł Małaszyński
Music by Krzysztof Penderecki
Cinematography Paweł Edelman
Edited by Milenia Fiedler
Rafał Listopad
Distributed by ITI Cinema
Release date
  • September 17, 2007 (2007-09-17)
Running time
115 minutes
Country Poland
Language Polish
Russian
German
Budget 15,000,000 PLN
€4,000,000

Katyń (Polish pronunciation: [ˈkatɨɲ]) is a 2007 Polish film about the 1940 Katyn massacre, directed by Academy Honorary Award winner Andrzej Wajda. It is based on the book Post Mortem: The Story of Katyn by Andrzej Mularczyk. It was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film for the 80th Academy Awards.

The Katyn massacre, also known as the zbrodnia katyńska ('Katyń crime'), was a mass execution of Polish POW officers and citizens ordered by the Soviet authorities in 1940. The most widely accepted estimate of the number of dead is about 22,000. The victims were murdered in the Katyn forest, Kalinin (Tver) and Kharkiv prisons, and elsewhere. About 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the Soviet 1939 invasion of Poland, the rest being Poles arrested for allegedly being "intelligence agents, gendarmes, spies, saboteurs, landowners, factory owners, lawyers, priests, and officials."

During the German occupation of Poland, the Germans used the massacre for propaganda purposes against the Soviets. However, after the war, when Poland fell under Soviet influence, the truth about the event was suppressed by the Soviet authorities, who maintained an official line throughout the Eastern Bloc that the massacre was committed by the Germans. With the fall of communism in Poland in 1989, the first non-communist Polish government immediately acknowledged that the crime was committed by the Soviets. In 1990, Mikhail Gorbachev acknowledged Soviet responsibility for the Katyn massacre for the first time. In 1991, Boris Yeltsin made public the documents which had authorised the massacre.


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