Chicks Are Just Different

Another View 2012 / Baby są jakieś inne / Poland 2011

A nighttime drive starring a couple of guys who can’t talk about anything but women. And they couldn’t possibly see them in the best light when they criticize everything about them, from their driving ability to how they eliminate. In this dynamic conversational film, however, men come off far worse.

Chicks Are Just Different

Synopsis

A nighttime ride with a couple of chauvinists who think that feminism is just about certain troublemakers not getting enough (i.e. sex). But the guys have a lot more on their minds and they’re unlikely to leave any stone unturned when it comes to women. No matter how many stereotypical memes slip from the protagonists’ lips in this dynamic conversational game, it isn’t women who end up the cinematic losers. Ultimately, the men are so desperate they no longer even find sexist jokes funny. They are the poor beggars here, betraying their own shortcomings in biased monologues; and with each additional sneer, they earn one in return from the audience. And this is no movie to shy away from direct confrontation with viewers, who are forced to take stock of the stereotypical thinking in their own thought processes. Although the men in the film seem to talk of nothing else, always finding new pretexts for criticizing the female sex, the picture maintains a high standard of humor and even of variety, something unexpected from a dialogue-based movie.

About the film

94 min / Color, DCP
International premiere

Director Marek Koterski / Screenplay Marek Koterski / Dir. of Photography Jerzy Zieliński / Editor Andrzej Kowalski / Producer Jerzy Kapuściński / Production Studio Filmowe KADR / Cast Robert Więckiewicz, Adam Woronowicz / Contact Studio Filmowe KADR

About the director

Marek Koterski

Marek Koterski (b. 1942, Kraków) studied Polish literature and history of art at the University of Wrocław, then went on to graduate in direction from the National Film School in Łódź (PWSFTviT). Thanks to his time as a stage director, many of his numerous documentaries focus on the theater and its people. In 1984 he debuted with The Mad House, followed by the well-received The Inner Life (1986). In a subsequent series of films (including Porno, 1989 and No Laughing Matter, 1995), he returned to the character of Adaś Miauczyński, who is also the protagonist of Day of the Wacko (2002). That film competed at Karlovy Vary in the East of the West section, and was shown at the Berlinale as well. At the national film festival in Gdynia, Day of the Wacko took the Grand Prix, and Best Actor went to Marek Kondrat.

Contacts

Studio Filmowe KADR
Pulawska 61, 02-595, Warsaw
Poland
Phone: +48 228 454 923
E-mail: studio@kadr.com.pl

Guests

Malgorzata Janczak
Film Institution Rep., PR & Marketing

Marek Koterski
Film Director

Maria Letowska

Agnieszka Odorowicz
Film Institution Rep.

Malgorzata Bogdanska
Actress