Spe Salvi Institute Podcast
What does a secular Polish filmmaker have to teach us about the soul? More than you might expect. In this episode, Robert Mixa and Andrew Petiprin sit down to explore the life and work of Krzysztof Kieślowski — one of the most quietly profound filmmakers of the twentieth century — and ask why his films continue to haunt viewers long after the credits roll. From the moral intensity of The Dekalog, a ten-part meditation on the Ten Commandments set in a Warsaw apartment block, to the mystery of The Double Life of Véronique, and the soaring ambition of the Three Colors Trilogy (Blue, White, and Red), Kieślowski created a body of work worth contemplating. Robert and Andrew explore what it means that a filmmaker who identified as an "agnostic mystic" kept returning — compulsively, almost helplessly — to questions of providence, the hidden connections between human souls, the weight of moral choice, and the strange luminosity of ordinary life. Is there a theological grammar underneath Kieślowski's images? Why do his films feel like prayers? And what can Catholics and serious Christians learn from an artist who approached transcendence from the outside, and got closer to it than most? Listen in and learn why Kieślowski is worthy of high admiration.
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