Poklosie
- Year:
- 2012
- 13 Views
Bye bye.
Bye, thank you very much.
Here.
- Central station...
- Certainly, sir.
You get off the 11:50 from Chicago?
- Excuse me?
- You get off the 11:50 from Chicago?
Yes.
Been there long?
How's the living there?
You here different things.
Some say it's good, some say it's not.
So I ask people off
the 11:
50 how they get by.And what do they say, percentage-wise?
It's 50-50.
Most of them are satisfied, though.
What about you - you dissatisfied?
They sure don't let a Pole
make an honest buck over there,
I'll tell you that much.
When do we get to the station?
When's your train?
So, where are you headed?
My brother's place.
Evening, sir. Lost your way?
No, I just left my bag here
a while ago and now it's gone.
I didn't see any bag along the way,
not that I was looking for one.
What do you mean "gone"?
I put it down here,
stepped in the woods,
- and when I came back it wasn't there.
- Funny...
be going this time of night?
To Jzek Kalina's. I'm his brother.
Kalina? So you're the long-lost
brother from America?
- Yes I am.
- Sergeant Nowak.
- Franciszek Kalina.
- I wasn't around when you left,
but I've heard a thing or two.
Hop in, I'll give you a lift.
There was nobody there at the bus stop.
I thought I saw something
in the woods, so I went to check it out.
Must have been a vacationer
because locals don't go wandering
at night. Why should they?
Vacationers do all kinds
of crazy things, though.
- You get a lot of vacationers?
- Everybody rents out rooms nowadays.
Except for your brother
and the Malinowskis.
mind you, but I know anyways.
People want to make
an extra buck, no wonder.
Those Malinowskis always
kept to themselves.
Malinowskis, yes...
But your brother didn't
back when Jola was around...
Come down to the station
tomorrow and we'll file a report.
I don't want to put you
to any trouble...
And I'm not starting
no investigation either,
but if it does get found,
you'll be able to prove it's yours.
Who's there?
- What's with the axe, Joziu?
- Handier than a scythe up close...
That you, Franek?
Come on in.
Brother...
How's Jola and the kids?
Fine, they're living with me,
Charlene's helping out with the kids...
Come in. Don't stand
in the yard like that.
- Where's your luggage?
- Lost or stolen...
Stolen? Where? At the station?
- In the woods...
- Scram, dumb mutt!
Hasn't changed a bit...
What was supposed to change?
This ain't America,
nothing changes here.
Want some tea? I didn't cook dinner
today, so there's no leftovers.
I had something at the station.
Jzek, stop fussing with that fire.
- Tell me why Jola left you.
- She didn't say?
She didn't tell me anything.
I asked twice, then I gave up.
- What was it about?
- Damned if I know.
She say she couldn't
put up with me anymore?
- Couldn't she?
- I can put up with myself just fine.
What'd you come here for?
Why did she have to move
all the way to America
- instead of going to her mother's?
- Drink?
- Do you?
- No.
Did you drink before
Jola took the kids?
Want me to make your bed?
In the kids' room...
I'll make it myself.
Jzek, did you do anything
to Jola or the kids? Swear, now.
What do you think, brother?
Something must have happened
to make Jolka up and leave for America.
What about when you left?
I was a kid, father was on disability,
so you left Ma to farm
- What happened then, Franek?
- Ancient history...
I'll show you just how
ancient it is tomorrow...
What was that?
Your guess is as good
as mine.
Some punks...
- Lots of vacationers this year...
- Vacationers?
If I had come to the funeral, they
wouldn't have let me out of the country.
They'd have taken my passport,
maybe even put me in jail...
So? You didn't come
for your parents' funerals.
Not father's, not mother's.
Explain that to them.
I might buy the passport story
but what about them?
- They're dead.
- Maybe to you they are...
Excuse me. Jzek, stop.
- I'm taking them all. This week.
- This isn't over yet.
If God won't set things
right, the congregation will.
Kalina, come to your senses.
Do you mind?
Sure. Two zlotys.
- Do you sell Willis?
- Only what's there.
- Good bye.
- Good bye.
- Come to stay with Kalina, now?
- To see my brother.
- You're Suds, you own the forge.
- From America, now?
Chicago.
- Olejnik's eldest died there.
- That was way back.
Olejnik's eldest left
with the Americans after the war,
I left just before Jaruzelski
announced martial law.
I saw Olejnik's children,
they're Americans now,
- How long you been away, now?
Didn't come to the old folks' funeral,
did you now?
No, I didn't.
Seen your brother, have you?
We were just at the cemetery.
He pass this way?
Might take the brother
with you to America.
Jzek?
He's not one for going anywhere.
You have to be young in America.
It's a land for young folks.
Could help him out like brothers do.
Grandpa!
- Why? Is the farm not doing well?
- His farming's no business of mine...
What do you mean?
- What was that all about?
- I wouldn't know,
but I'd do what Suds says.
Shame for your brother to stay here.
Besides, his woman and kids're
already there, know what I'm saying?
She just went there for the summer.
I know what I know.
Mister Kalina!
Would you mind stopping by...
just for a spell.
Eagle's got no crown...
Observant, aren't we?
Didn't see your suitcase
getting stolen though.
Suitcase ain't made of gold...
...but you did bring
something back from America?
Got everything on me.
Wacek, take down a report.
Will you please describe
the suitcase and its contents?
Just a moment, Chief,
let me find the form.
- What about your brother Jzek?
Is he liked in the village?
Mister Kalina, have you been
drinking outside the store today?
- God bless...
- Bless you, Father...
Wladek, can you spare a minute...
Back in a flash.
What's this?
A motion from the chief
to have your brother fined
The people wanted to lynch him.
If it wasn't for Nowak,
I mean the chief, God only
knows what would have happened.
- What road?
- The one to the old tannery.
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
I saw you outside the store.
You were talking to my grandfather...
You're Suds's granddaughter?
I mean Sudecki, the blacksmith.
My grandfather's not a blacksmith
any more. No more horses.
- Does anybody have a job here?
- I do. At the clinic in Gurwka.
You've come from America?
Did you see Jola?
You know her?
She'd bring the kids down to
the clinic, that's how we met.
- How is she?
- Doing OK.
Did she tell you why all of sudden she
was going to America, without my brother?
I didn't know she was going,
until people said
she took the kids and left.
I mean, those things
require preparation,
you need to go get visas
in Warsaw, and all that.
You know about the road?
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