Wigilia (film)

Wigilia is a 2014 drama film directed by Graham Drysdale and starring Iwona Glowinska and Duglas T. Stewart. It centres on a traditional Polish Christmas Eve wigilia supper shared in Glasgow by its two main characters, Agata and Robbie. The film is Drysdale's debut feature.[1]

Wigilia
Directed byGraham Drysdale
Produced by
  • Grant McPhee
  • Steven Moore
  • Graham Drysdale
Written by
Starring
Cinematography
  • Grant McPhee
Edited byShaun Glowa
Distributed byTartan Features
Release date
  • December 24, 2014 (2014-12-24)
Running time
71 minutes
CountryScotland
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Agata, a Polish woman alone in Glasgow at Christmas time, sets out a wigilia supper in her boss's empty house, complete with the traditional extra place setting for a wondering pilgrim. Unbeknown to her, Robbie, her boss's brother, has decided to stop by for a few days, thinking he'd be alone. Robbie takes up the place of the wondering pilgrim at the table and the pair share the meal, not knowing the impact their encounter would have on each of their lives.

Production

Wigilia came about after the film's producer challenged Drysdale to come up with a story for a film that could be shot in the space of five days, although the film was completed over six and a half.[2] The latter scenes of the film were shot a year after the Polish wigilia scenes, mirroring the year between the meetings of Agata and Robbie.[3]

Much of the film's dialogue was improvised by Glowinska and Stewart.[4]

Cast

Drysdale has said that he used the backgrounds of the two main actors - Glowinska is Polish and Stewart from Glasgow - to further the character development in the film: "The actors added a huge amount to the story and their characters. We talked a lot about their backgrounds – what had brought them here and how they would react to various situations."[5]

The part of Robbie was written with Stewart in mind,[6] with Drysdale drawing on Stewart's musical background in a scene where he breaks into song.[7]

Music

The film is scored by Jim Harbourne[8] and features an original composition - Agata's Song - by Stewart and Norman Blake of Teenage Fanclub.[9]

gollark: I actually caught a rarish thing (astrapi xenowyrm)!
gollark: "Dark green" or whatever.
gollark: Now I have a planty dragon to name...
gollark: Smol?
gollark: I mean, it's free, but sounds weird.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.