Suicide Room

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Suicide Room
Directed byJan Komasa
Written byJan Komasa
Produced byJerzy Kapuściński
StarringJakub Gierszał
CinematographyRadosław Ładczuk
Edited byBartosz Pietras
Music byMichal Jacaszek
Production
companies
Distributed byITI Cinema
Release dates
  • 12 February 2011 (2011-02-12) (Berlinale)
  • 4 March 2011 (2011-03-04) (Poland)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryPoland
LanguagePolish
Budget6 million
Box office$7.2 million[1]

Suicide Room (Polish: Sala Samobójców) is a 2011 Polish drama thriller film written and directed by Jan Komasa, and starring Jakub Gierszał as a popular high school student whose life quickly deteriorates into ostracisation and depression.

The film premiered on 12 February 2011 at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival[2] and received a wide release on 4 March 2011. It garnered positive reviews, and went on to several awards, including best actor (Jakub Gierszał), best actress (Roma Gąsiorowska), best screenplay (Jan Komasa) and best film.

Plot

Dominik Santorski is a popular but spoiled teenager, whose success-driven parents are out of touch with his life. At school, Dominik and his friends stumble upon a self-harm video while using his computer. Later, Dominik watches the rest of the video and leaves a comment for the poster.

While drinking at an after-prom party, a girl admits to lesbian experimentation. A classmate, Aleksander, dares the girl to kiss her female friend. She agrees as long as Aleksander agrees to kiss Dominik. The two girls comply, and Aleksander and Dominik as well. A video of the two boys kissing is posted to social media, and Dominik's friends appear to find it cool. Later, when Dominik and Aleksander spar at judo practice, Dominik becomes aroused. This event is relayed to social media, and people begin to harass Dominik online.

Dominik meets Sylwia, a suicidal girl who cuts herself and wears a mask, in an online chat group called "Sala Samobójców" (The Suicide Room). Dominik begins skipping school to spend time online. When Dominik sees an online video showing shadow puppets named after him and Aleksander engaging in homosexual acts, he rampages through his room. Sylwia mocks his pain and encourages him to scare normal people. Dominik adopts an alternative look and takes his father's gun to school. When Aleksander approaches him with some friends after school, Dominik begins to take out his gun, but flees to his taxi.

Dominik discovers that Sylwia is a shut-in who has not left her room in three years. Dominik stays locked in his room, talking with Sylwia. These events go unnoticed by his parents. Eventually, the family's housekeeper calls the police, who break down Dominik's door to find him sitting in a pool of blood beside a broken mirror. He is sent to a hospital and kept in a psychiatric ward for three days. His parents arrive to take him home, claiming that there is nothing wrong with him and that he should be studying for exams.

Dominik returns home and to The Suicide Room, where Sylwia tells him a love story in which the lovers die by suicide with pills and alcohol. After confessing that this is how she wants to die, she begs him to get pills for her. Having been sent to a psychiatrist, Dominik answers the questions in accordance with Sylwia's instructions. Sylwia feeds him answers that are designed to lead the doctor to give him the pills that she wishes to use. Dominik follows the lines Sylwia gives, but—in a plea for Sylwia to reconsider her suicide plan—continually remarks that no one should want to die.

As Dominik and Sylwia discuss where to meet and transfer the pills, Dominik's father rips out the router before their plans are set. Dominik panics, but later confesses to his parents. They forbid him from returning but, still wanting to see Sylwia, Dominik brings the pills to the bar they had discussed in the hope that Sylwia will show up. Dominik heads to the toilets and takes two handfuls of the pills. Dominik then finds a couple kissing and starts filming them. They take his camera and begin filming his delirium. Dominik returns to the bar, finds Sylwia, and kisses her passionately.

Later, at The Suicide Room, Sylwia talks about Dominik's long absence before seeing his avatar, only to learn that it's his mother, who announces that Dominik has died. It is revealed that Dominik never left the bathroom after taking the pills, and his overdose was filmed by the drunk couple. Dominik attempted to reverse his decision but to no avail. His death is posted online on The Suicide Room wall.

Cast

Festivals and awards

In April 2011 the movie received the

International Festival of Independent Cinema Off Plus Camera, in June of that year it won the Silver Lions award at the 36th Gdynia Film Festival and individual awards[3] for sound and costumes for Bartosz Purkiewicz and Dorota Roqueoplo, respectively. Jakub Gierszał received the Audience Award and was nominated for the 2011 Zbyszek Cybulski
Award for the role of Dominik. In November 2011 the movie won 3 Golden Duck statuettes, awarded by the readership of the Film magazine, in the categories: Best Cinematography, Best Script and Best Film. Jakub Gierszał also won the award for Best Actor.

Wins

Soundtrack

No.TitleArtistLength
1."Romans"Adam Walicki 
2."Grass So Bright"Kyst 
3."Baudelaire"Rykarda Parasol 
4."C'est la mort"
Włodek Pawlik Quartet featuring Randy Brecker
 
20."Rock with me pumpin trump"Wet Fingers 
21."On My Mind"Wawa & Houseshaker 
22."Mazurka, Op. 17 No. 4 by Frédéric Chopin"Magdalena Żuk 
23."Cherry is Gone"Rykarda Parasol 
24."Piano Concerto No.23 in A Major, K 488 Adagio"Mozart 
25."Der Doppelgänger"Schubert 

References

  1. ^ "Sala samobójców (Suicide Room) (2011)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  2. ^ "Sala samobójców | Suicide Room". www.berlinale.de.
  3. ^ a b "GFF - Laureaci". Archived from the original on 1 October 2013. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Nagrody - Sala samobójców (2011)". Filmweb.
  5. ^ "Polskie Nagrody Filmowe: Orły 2011 Ogłoszenie nominacji do ORŁÓW 2011". Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  6. ^ "Złote Kaczki 2011 - Gala 2011". Archived from the original on 2 August 2012. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  7. ^ "Plus Camerimage - PC 2012". Archived from the original on 7 September 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2012.

External links