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Pokot (Spoor)
Janina Duszejko, an elderly woman, lives alone in the Klodzko Valley where a series of mysterious crimes are committed. Duszejko is convinced that she knows who or what is the murderer, but nobody believes her.


















9 September 1979, Lódz, Lódzkie, Poland

1969, Poland

1975, Bielawa, Dolnoslaskie, Poland

15 March 1952, Chrzanów, Malopolskie, Poland


21 April 1977, Legnica, Dolnoslaskie, Poland

12 November 1951, Sumperk, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]

10 January 1951, Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland

14 July 1968, Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland

13 August 1971, Mragowo, Warminsko-Mazurskie, Poland

20 March 1988, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland

4 September 1978, Lódz, Lódzkie, Poland

29 May 1953, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland



February 12, 2017
Spoor's narrative defies easy categorisation but invites considerable contemplation.
August 03, 2017
It has the ungainly but attractive ambience of an old fairy tale being passed down through the generations, becoming more and more embellished on each retelling
February 13, 2017
Nothing about it screams gross ineptitude, but the universal below-averageness proves grating.
June 13, 2017
As the film progresses though you begin to get the feeling that you're being manipulated by the way that Duszejko views the world. One begins to ask what aren't you seeing?
February 12, 2017
Holland, who had a hit a few years back with the HBO Europe spy series set during the Cold War, Burning Bush, is a mistress of spare, elegant shots that show just enough to advance the story.
February 12, 2017
The film is watchable in its quirky and wayward way, with some funny moments - though shallower than it thinks.
February 12, 2017
The movie is murky and disjointed, held together not so much by what happens as by a vague atmosphere of obsession.
March 13, 2017
Moody and sometimes amusing... flits between mystery, thriller, black comedy and even fairy tale elements.
February 17, 2017
Though far from perfect, this one part revenge thriller, one part eco-reverie, tied together with sumptuous visual brio, is the "John Wick"/ "Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring" mash-up you never knew you always wanted.