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  1. Golem
    1980 · Science fiction · 1h 32m

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  1. Golem is a 1979 Polish science fiction film directed and co-written by Piotr Szulkin. Inspired by the titular being in Jewish folklore, as well as the 1915 novel The Golem by Austrian author Gustav Meyrink, the film takes place in a 21st-century dystopia and reimagines the golem as a genetic clone. [1] [2] [3]

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt0080806Golem (1980) - IMDb

    Mar 18, 1980 · Golem: Directed by Piotr Szulkin. With Marek Walczewski, Krystyna Janda, Joanna Zólkowska, Anna Jaraczówna. The film is set in a terrorizing world of the future, where technology commands the movements of individuals, supervised by the doctors, carrying out a program to improve the human race.

    • (858)
    • Sci-Fi
    • Piotr Szulkin
    • 1980-03-18
  3. "Golem" is a 1980 dystopian science fiction film directed by Piotr Szulkin. An interesting contributor to the Polish film movement for a multi-decadal span starting in the mid 1970's, Szulkin's exhibits an often brutal setting vision of societal decay intermixed in a coated fear of the future world.

    • (1.9K)
    • Studio Filmowe Perspektywa
    • Piotr Szulkin
  4. Set in a dystopian, post apocalyptic future, the movie opens with shots of a mass of white rats interspersed with masked doctors hovering over their new creation, a man. Next we see two men, identical in appearance, under interrogation in a police station.

  5. 1h 32m. In the future humankind is controlled by technology and doctors to improve the human race. One of the creations is suspected of being a normal human being, a reverse golem.

    • (3)
    • Piotr Szulkin
    • Sci-Fi
    • Henryk Bak
  6. Fantastyczne wątki powieści z początków XX w., przeniesione w przyszłość, kiedy naukowcy już masowo tworzą nowych, "sztucznych" ludzi. W świecie wyniszczonym...

    • 3 min
    • 29K
    • Wiktor Swawolny
  7. In some dystopian future, scientists attempt to create a new, pliable race of humans. A seemingly ordinary product of the effort, the genetically engineered Pernat (Marek Walczewski) is subject to round-the-clock monitoring as he goes about his life amidst drab Soviet bloc architecture.

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