A Poland stands in scandals; and not only those in which billions of taxpayers' money is circulating lost by Obiek on the way from the dentist to the charming Botox office. It turned out that the erstwhile CEO of Orlen was pulling his skin to look better, while besides drawing the company's money to look modest.
Meanwhile, as the movie Hunting proves, scandals and a non-pardoned political conflict are not only the domain of capital and large cities. It's besides the reality of tiny towns. Here is simply a local hero who gains popularity thanks to chance (in this function Michał Czernecki), is elected by a local bonz and manipulator (Artur Barcis as a villain character) as a mayoral candidate. Thanks to a sharp run and organized pig planting action, the old town manipulator's choice wins the election.
It is to be the puppet of the local sieve, but to the horror of the rotten arrangement it turns out to be the only fair one. So there is simply a test of forces, in which the punches below the belt and a series of unauthorised grips destruct the noble hero who stood up to the local elite. A hero brought to the ground level lands at the bottom. However, he finds the strength in himself to fight for the fact and in the final, like a gunfighter from a western, he kills his opponents mediaally. If this is what the Polish state looks like (and the film's creators point out that it is simply a communicative based on facts), then the fear of leaving the city "in Poland", due to the fact that there are plots and agreements everywhere.
The movie looks beautiful good, even though the script is simply a pattern known from American cinema. There's a town full of sad deals, until a good 1 shows up, who makes a revolution, then gets a small hit in the head, but wins in the final. If you are not tired of reading about who, as well as who wanted to finish off in the central arena of Polish politics, I urge this film, which will satisfy the appetite for dealing with scandals, this time in the movie version.