LUNAR
Description
In the summer of 1976, the late Polish film director Andrzej Żuławski, responsible for infamous cult classics such as The Devil (1972) and Possession (1981), was given a green light to shoot the most expensive film ever made in Poland. On the Silver Globe was meant to be a massively ambitious science-fiction epic set on the Moon, showing the birth of a new civilisation, and produced without the benefit of modern special effects. But things didn't quite go to plan.
The huge ambitions of a temperamental and demanding director combined with the financial and technological realities of 1970s Poland meant that the production faced an uphill battle from the first day of shooting. But with over 70% of the film already shot, and the end almost in sight, On the Silver Globe unexpectedly fell victim to the whims of a Communist Party hardliner and was relegated to cinematic history.
How do you make a space opera without Hollywood special effects in a state-run economy? What were the crew doing in Mongolia? Who was Janusz Wilhelmi and why did he shut down the production? And does the story ultimately have a happy ending?
Like our show? Sign up for our newsletter!
Time stamps
[01:24 ] Intro
[02:56 ] Flying to the Moon
[05:10 ] Economic strife & a controversial director
[07:20 ] Making a space opera without special effects
[10:09 ] The Gobi Desert as the Moon
[12:10 ] Production delays & cost overruns
[16:15 ] Script changes & Hamlet monologues
[18:37 ] A burning Shern
[22:03 ] Wilhelmi arrives on the scene
[25:55 ] ‘It’s over, lads.’
[29:38 ] Is this how the story ends?
[33:54 ] Credits
Further reading
- On the Silver Globe // film description on Culture.pl
- Andrzej Żulawski // bio on Culture.pl
- The Origins of Polish Sci-Fi & The Legacy of Jerzy Żuławski // feature article on Culture.pl about the origins of The Lunar Trilogy books and their far-reaching influence
- Jerzy Żuławski // bio on Culture.pl
- On the Silver Globe // on RogerEbert.com
Further watching
- On The Silver Globe // fragment of the film after digital restoration, on Kadr Film Studio’s Youtube channel.
Further visiting
- CETA Audiovisual Technology Centre// If you happen to be in the beautiful South-West city of Wrocław, you can visit the building that used to house the Wrocław film studio, which served as a base for the film, as well as such classics as The Saragossa Manuscript by Wojciech Jerzy Has. These days it houses a state-of the art special effects studio, but remains the home of the surviving costumes and props from On the Silver Globe.
Credits
Written & produced by Piotr Wołodźko
Edited by Wojtek Oleksiak & Adam Zulawski
Hosted by Nitzan Reisner & Adam Zulawski
Scoring & sound design by Wojciech Oleksiak
Thanks
We'd like to thank Andrzej Jaroszewicz, Andrzej Seweryn, Stefan Kurzyp, and Jerzy Śnieżawski for talking to us. Many thanks also to Daniel Bird for guiding us through the strange world that is On the Silver Globe. And lastly, a special thanks to Maria Duffek, costume designer at the CETA audiovisual technology centre in Wrocław for her help and extensive knowledge.