Ida

7.2
20131h 22m

In 1960s Poland, young novitiate Anna is on the verge of taking her vows when she discovers a family secret dating back to the years of the German occupation.

Production

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Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer [Subtitled]

Official Trailer [Subtitled]

Thumbnail for video: Mark Kermode reviews  Ida (2014) | BFI Player

Mark Kermode reviews Ida (2014) | BFI Player

Thumbnail for video: "Ida" Wins Foreign Language Film: 2015 Oscars

"Ida" Wins Foreign Language Film: 2015 Oscars

Thumbnail for video: Writer/Drirector Pawel Pawlikowski talks about the framing of IDA

Writer/Drirector Pawel Pawlikowski talks about the framing of IDA

Thumbnail for video: Ida | BAFTA Film not in the English Language Winner 2015 | Backstage Interview

Ida | BAFTA Film not in the English Language Winner 2015 | Backstage Interview

Thumbnail for video: Clip #2

Clip #2

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Clip #1

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Clip #3

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Clip #8

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Clip #7

Cast

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

A beautifully shot story about a young woman who was abandoned to the church as a baby and is now about to take holy orders. Before she fully commits, however, she decides to trace her birth family. Agata Trzebuchowska ("Anna") alights on her aunt Agata Kulesza ("Wanda") - a former pillar of the post war Polish communist legal establishment, but now a rather dissolute character prone to drinking and one night stands, to help her find the truth. Her family story has some grisly history to it, but together they travel their country in search of some answers. En route, they pick up a hitchhiker "Lis" (David Ogrodnik) who (genuinely) plays tenor sax in a band that has a gig in their hotel with with whom she bonds - after a fashion - until their search is concluded and yet more tragedy strikes our novice nun. This film is wonderfully enigmatic - it is quite difficult to date; the script is taut but sparing; the monochrome effects render it an atmosphere all of it's own and despite the inevitability of the whole thing, there is still a degree of optimism and sincerity seeping through the prevailing timbre of sadness.

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