Tatarak is a Polish movie (Sweet Rush) which I didn’t find interesting at all, even though it is (at least partially, afaik) based on a true story. I only saw it because there aren’t any interesting movies playing at the moment. I shouldn’t have bothered. The plot courtesy of Wikipedia:

The main story is set in post-World War II Poland in which a beautiful and dignified middle-aged woman, Martha is terminally ill. But her husband, a small-town doctor, declines to tell her since she has so little time to live. As it is, Martha drifts in a melancholy state, still mourning the deaths of two sons in the war until a working-class youth catches her eye. He is about the age her boys would be or maybe a few years younger.

Within the movie, Krystyna Janda is seen on an austere, simple set, delivering a monologue before a stationary camera about the final days in her husband's life, how suddenly his death came and even how unprepared she still is to cope with his passing. Edward K?osi?ski died whilst taking the sips of water she fed him to keep him hydrated. According to Janda, the death came one afternoon, thus giving her time for an evening performance on stage. The film-within-a-film was actually Janda's idea and she even wrote her own lines. In art as in life, a man's passing is mourned and the end result is a deeply moving film about death, sorrow, and farewells to loved ones.

I didn’t feel deeply moved but whatever… hopefully some more interesting (to me) films will come out later this week.

Movie #: 12