The Box Office is open from 14:10 till 22:30 (will open in 06:02).

Mug Twarz

Małgorzata Szumowska / Poland / 2018 / 91 min / Polish

An insightful tale about the many problems an outsider has to confront after a facial disfigurement, Mug is an indictment of a prejudiced Polish community.

festivals, awards Berlinale 2018 (velika nagrada žirije/Jury Grand Prix), Edinburg/Edinburgh 2018

IMDb

Photos

Construction-worker Jacek likes to attract attention with his rebellious attitude, propensity for heavy metal and reckless driving. When he and his girlfriend take to the dancefloor, everyone runs for cover. He seems to be an outsider longing to escape a deeply conservative rural community close to the Polish-German border. But then one day, while at work with his mates building the world’s tallest statue of Christ, his life is thrown badly off course by an accident that completely disfigures him. Despite the initial optimism and the status of a national hero, he strives to cope not only with an unrecognisable reflection in the mirror but also with the prejudice and indifference of people.

"This film is definitely a kind of statement about what is going on in Poland. Like, people are completely locked. This is a paradox, that they are OK because they have money, etc, and we don’t have refugees. They’re happy that they live in a white country for white Catholics. They are creating an extremely locked, hermetic environment, which is also locked from the unknown, from the others, etc. So the movie is a reaction to that. And what is going on in Poland is very sad, a very complex, a very complicated situation. But I’m afraid it’s not only Poland." (Małgorzata Szumowska)

Małgorzata Szumowska
Born in Krakow in 1973, Szumowska graduated from the National Film School in Łódź and subsequently began directing short, feature and documentary films. One of the most prominent Polish directors today, Szumowska’s films tend to present a critique of present-day society. Her movies have received many national and international festival awards. Her last feature, Body, received the Silver Bear for Best Director at the 2015 Berlin Film Festival.

Kinodvor. Newsletter.

Join our mailing list and receive details of upcoming films and events!

What's On

Hamnet Hamnet

Chloé Zhao

Friday, 13. 02. 2026 / 15:10 / Main Hall

Chloé Zhao (Nomadland) imagines how a tragedy from Shakespeare’s real life might have inspired the creation of his timeless masterpiece Hamlet. Starring the exceptional Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal, the film is a moving story about love, loss, and the healing power of art.

Venom Gift

Knud Leif Thomsen

Friday, 13. 02. 2026 / 17:45 / Main Hall

Thomsen’s Danish-style Teorema (1968) predating Pasolini’s is as double-edged as its title (gift meaning both “poison” and “married”). The director conceived it as a polemical tract against pornography and the moral decay of Danish society. But by filling it with nudity and hardcore snippets, he ironically paved the way for a censorship-free Denmark, which in 1969 became the first country to legalize pornography. The censors covered the explicit scenes with thick white crosses (making them somehow even more obscene). And it is precisely on such a historical 35mm print that we will have the pleasure to see the film!

Six Swedish Girls in a Boarding School Sechs Schwedinnen im Pensionat

Erwin C. Dietrich

Friday, 13. 02. 2026 / 20:10 / Main Hall

The first lady of French porno chic, Brigitte Lahaie, returns in the original instalment of the cheeky fan favourite Six Swedish Girls at a Boarding School—taking place before the young Swedes found employment at a gas station and well-deserved holidays in Ibiza and the Alps. Directed by the “Swiss Roger Corman”, Erwin C. Dietrich, the evergreen hit from our Socialist past and the once notorious erotic Kino Sloga is bursting at the seams with zany humour, mechanical invention, and healthy minds in oh, such healthy bodies.