A Generation (Polish: Pokolenie) is a 1955 Polish drama film directed by Andrzej Wajda as his feature-length debut.[1][2] Adapted from Bohdan Czeszko's novel of the same name, with Czeszko also penning the screenplay, the film portrays the radicalization of young proletarian workers in Nazi-occupied Warsaw into the communist resistance amid personal hardships and wartime atrocities.[1][3] Set against the backdrop of the German invasion and occupation, it emphasizes class consciousness and the shift from individual survival to collective armed struggle, reflecting the socialist realist influences prevalent in post-war Polish cinema under communist rule.[4] The work launched Wajda's career and initiated his war trilogy—followed by Kanal (1957) and Ashes and Diamonds (1958)—establishing a stark, unflinching examination of Poland's wartime youth experience that heralded the Polish Film School movement.[1][5] Despite its artistic innovations in cinematography and narrative pace, the film has been critiqued for its overt propagandistic tone in glorifying communist partisans while downplaying non-communist resistance efforts, a product of the era's political constraints.[4]
Synopsis
Plot
The film opens in 1942 in the Wola district of Nazi-occupied Warsaw, where the young protagonist Stach, living in squalor, engages in petty theft and initially displays apathy toward the ongoing occupation while seeking work as an apprentice in a German-run furniture factory producing goods for the German army.[2][1] Stach befriends fellow worker Jasio and, under the guidance of a journeyman named Sekula, encounters Kostek, a communist partisan organizer who introduces him to the underground resistance.[6][7]Stach meets Dorota, a dedicated young female activist in the communist youth organization, and begins participating in acts of defiance, including stealing materials from the factory and forming a small sabotage cell among the workers.[2][8] His radicalization deepens through personal hardships, such as the death of his mother from illness, and he develops romantic feelings for Dorota, though she prioritizes the cause.[9] Meanwhile, Jasio forms a relationship with Grucha, a factory coworker, and impulsively shoots a Germanofficer after witnessing him assault her, prompting brutal German reprisals that include public executions, such as Grucha's mother.[6][10]Guilt-ridden, Jasio joins the partisans for armed training and operations, while Stach's group escalates to factory sabotage and confrontations with authorities; betrayals within the resistance lead to further arrests and executions, including Kostek's death at German hands.[7][6] Stach survives these losses, assumes leadership of the remaining fighters, and in the final scene, passes a rifle to a younger boy, signifying his full commitment to continued armed struggle.[9][11]
Cast
Principal Performers
Tadeusz Łomnicki embodied Stach Mazur, the film's protagonist, depicting a young Warsaw worker's evolution from petty opportunism amid wartime scarcity to resolute engagement in armed resistance against Nazi occupation.[8] Urszula Modrzyńska portrayed Ewa (pseudonym Dorota), the partisan leader and Stach's romantic interest, whose resolve underscores the personal sacrifices and emotional intensities faced by underground fighters.[12] Zbigniew Cybulski played Kostek, a charismatic figure serving as an early ideological guide for Stach toward communist-influenced militancy, marking one of Cybulski's initial screen appearances.[13] In supporting roles, Tadeusz Janczar as Jasio Krone represented the vulnerability of novice recruits drawn into partisan life, while Janusz Paluszkiewicz as Sekuła captured the gritty authority of a workshopforeman exploiting labor under duress, contributing to the ensemble's portrayal of class-stratified urban survival dynamics.[12]
Production
Development
A Generation originated as an adaptation of Bohdan Czeszko's 1951 novel Pokolenie, an autobiographical work depicting youth involvement in wartime resistance, with Czeszko himself authoring the screenplay to emphasize themes of proletarian awakening and organized struggle consistent with socialist realist trends in postwar Polish literature.[1][9]Andrzej Wajda directed the film as his feature debut in 1954, shortly after graduating from the Leon Schiller National Higher School of Film, Television and Theatre in Łódź, where he had honed his skills amid a curriculum shaped by state ideological priorities.[14] The project proceeded under the auspices of the state monopoly Film Polski, requiring script vetting and production sanction from centralized authorities that enforced alignment with communist cultural doctrine.[15]Compared to the novel's exploration of personal turmoil, the screenplay amplified depictions of collective action within communist-led partisans, subordinating individual psychology to group mobilization and class consciousness—a adjustment reflecting the 1950s constraints of socialist realism, which demanded portrayals glorifying proletarian unity over nuanced character introspection.[16][17] This creative pivot occurred as early post-Stalin signals of liberalization emerged in Poland, facilitating approvals for narratives that, while propagandistic, introduced stylistic innovations signaling the incipient Polish Film School.[4]
Filming
Principal photography for A Generation (Pokolenie) commenced in 1954, marking Andrzej Wajda's directorial debut shortly after his graduation from the Łódź Film School.[18] Shooting occurred primarily on location in Łódź and Warsaw, leveraging the latter's postwar ruins to convey the devastation of Nazi-occupied Poland.[19] The production employed black-and-white 35mm film stock, a standard format that contributed to the film's stark, documentary-like aesthetic amid material shortages common to early postwar Polish cinema.[20]Wajda drew stylistic influences from Italian neorealism, incorporating unusual camera angles and dynamic framing to prioritize raw authenticity over the contrived sets and compositions favored in contemporaneous socialist realist productions.[21][22] These techniques, executed with limited equipment, emphasized handheld mobility and environmental integration, fostering immersion in the protagonists' precarious urban existence. Non-professional extras populated crowd sequences depicting resistance activities, amplifying the neorealist commitment to unpolished realism despite logistical hurdles like scarce resources and rudimentary technical support.[22]Post-production, including editing, wrapped in early 1955 under state-supervised conditions, resulting in a 87-minute runtime for the October 1955 premiere.[23] This constrained process reflected the debut film's navigation of institutional limitations, yet allowed Wajda to innovate within bounds, setting precedents for the Polish School of cinema's emphasis on location-based veracity.[21]
Historical and Political Context
World War II Polish Resistance
The Polish resistance movement emerged immediately following the German invasion on September 1, 1939, and the subsequent Soviet invasion on September 17, 1939, under the underground Polish Underground State loyal to the government-in-exile in London. The dominant force was the Armia Krajowa (Home Army, AK), reorganized in February 1942 from the earlier Union of Armed Struggle (ZWZ), which by mid-1944 numbered approximately 400,000 members engaged in intelligence gathering for the Allies, sabotage operations against German infrastructure (including disruptions to V-2 rocket production), and targeted assassinations of occupation officials.[24] AK units coordinated with Western Allies, providing critical reports on German troop movements and Enigma code materials, while avoiding direct collaboration with Soviet forces due to ideological opposition and historical animosities.[25]In contrast, communist-led groups under the Polish Workers' Party (PPR), including the People's Guard (Gwardia Ludowa) and later the People's Army (Armia Ludowa, AL), played a marginal role, with peak strength estimated at 30,000-60,000 fighters who often aligned operations with advancing Red Army units rather than independent action.[26] These formations comprised less than 10% of total resistance personnel, focusing on propaganda and selective sabotage while subordinating to Moscow's directives, which prioritized post-war power seizure over unified anti-Nazi efforts.[25] The AK's pinnacle action was the Warsaw Uprising launched on August 1, 1944, involving up to 50,000 fighters initially, aimed at liberating the capital ahead of Soviet arrival; it resulted in approximately 16,000-18,000 AK combatants killed and the near-total destruction of the city after 63 days of fighting.[27]German reprisals during the uprising were particularly brutal, exemplified by the Wola district massacre from August 5-7, 1944, where SS and auxiliary units systematically executed 40,000-50,000 civilians in acts of collective punishment, including hospital patients, clergy, and non-combatants, to terrorize the population and crush resistance morale.[28] Overall, Polish partisan losses during 1939-1945 are estimated at 90,000 killed, with the AK suffering the majority due to its scale and exposure in major operations.[25]Following the Red Army's advance in 1944-1945, non-communist resistance faced immediate Soviet suppression, as NKVD units arrested, deported, or executed AK leaders and rank-and-file who refused integration into communist structures, sparking a low-intensity civil conflict from 1945-1947 involving "cursed soldiers" (żołnierze wyklęci) who continued guerrilla warfare against the emerging Polish communist regime backed by Soviet forces.[29] This phase saw thousands more former AK members persecuted, with many fleeing to the forests for survival amid amnesties that proved illusory, underscoring the shift from anti-German to anti-Soviet struggle without external support.[30]
Postwar Communist Poland and Censorship
Following the end of World War II in 1945, the Soviet-backed Polish communist authorities consolidated power under the Polish Committee of National Liberation, transitioning to the Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR) after its formation on December 15, 1948, through the forced merger of communist and socialist parties.[31] This regime imposed strict control over cultural production to align it with Marxist-Leninist ideology, mandating socialist realism as the official doctrine for arts, which required depictions of reality in its "revolutionary development" toward communism, emphasizing heroic workers, collectivization, and class struggle while suppressing alternative narratives.[32] The Main Office of Control of Press, Publications, and Shows (GUKPPiW), established in 1945 and formalized in 1947, served as the central censorship apparatus, reviewing all printed materials, performances, and broadcasts preemptively to eliminate content threatening the "people's democratic" system, including any glorification of pre-war Poland or non-communist resistance.[33][34]The film industry, nationalized via the state monopoly Film Polski on November 13, 1945, exemplified this control, with production centralized under government oversight to produce propaganda reinforcing regime legitimacy. During the Stalinist peak from 1949 to 1953, coinciding with forced collectivization campaigns that displaced over 1.5 million peasants and show trials convicting thousands—including clergy and military figures—cultural output was rigorously policed, with the GUKPPiW banning or altering works deviating from socialist realism.[31] Suppression extended to veterans of the non-communist Armia Krajowa (Home Army), whose wartime anti-Nazi efforts were reframed as "fascist" or "imperialist"; by 1953, an estimated 50,000 to 80,000 former fighters faced arrest, execution, or internment in labor camps, fostering self-censorship among artists to avoid similar fates.[35] Film production during this era yielded fewer than 100 features, the majority—over 70% by thematic content—promoting proletarian triumphs and anti-capitalist themes, such as worker mobilization against "kulaks" or class enemies, with dissenters risking professional blacklisting or imprisonment, as seen in the shelving of non-conformist scripts.[36][37]The June 28–30, 1956, Poznań protests, triggered by worker grievances over quotas and wages at the Cegielski factories, escalated into violent clashes resulting in at least 74 deaths and hundreds injured, exposing regime failures and prompting a leadership crisis.[38] This catalyzed the "Gomułka Thaw" after Władysław Gomułka's appointment as PZPR first secretary on October 21, 1956, which eased some Stalinist excesses through de-collectivization affecting 80% of farms by 1957 and partial amnesty for political prisoners, including some Home Army members.[31] Culturally, the thaw permitted limited critiques of bureaucratic abuses in literature and film, but GUKPPiW oversight persisted, requiring narratives supportive of "Polish socialism" and prohibiting overt anti-regime content; while production rose to about 20 films annually post-1956, approvals still favored works aligning with party goals, with residual self-censorship ensuring compliance amid threats of renewed repression.[39][32]
Themes and Analysis
Class and Generational Dynamics
In Andrzej Wajda's A Generation, the protagonist Stach embodies the trajectory of a young proletarian drifter navigating urban destitution, initially engaging in survival-oriented theft before evolving into a committed resistance fighter amid factory drudgery and personal bereavement. This arc underscores socioeconomic pressures that propelled marginal youth toward radicalaction, as occupation-era factory work offered meager wages insufficient for sustenance, compelling many to supplement income through informal means.[7][40]The film's generational rift manifests in the older workers' passive endurance of exploitative conditions—marked by long hours, arbitrary dismissals, and deference to overseers—contrasted with the younger cohort's impulsive defiance, driven by acute vulnerability to conscription and famine. Empirical patterns from the era reveal youth comprising a core of underground networks, with resistance units often led by those under 25 due to their mobility and lower encumbrances from dependents, fostering a causal link between demographic vitality and mobilization intensity.[41][42]Class portrayals emphasize raw exploitation in prewar-rooted industrial settings, where owners extracted labor amid inadequate protections, echoing documented interwar disparities in Polish manufacturing with wages stagnating below subsistence levels for unskilled operatives. Yet this realism invites scrutiny for sidelining resilient adaptations, such as the pervasive black market in the General Government, which by 1942 channeled foodstuffs and goods to evade rationing shortfalls, sustaining households through barter networks that buffered official economic collapse for segments of the populace.[43][44][40]
Ideological Portrayal of Resistance
In A Generation (Polish: Pokolenie, 1955), the resistance against Nazi occupation is depicted through the lens of communist-led partisans affiliated with the Polish Workers' Party (PPR) and its armed wing, the People's Army (Armia Ludowa, AL), emphasizing collectivist antifascism over broader national alliances.[11] The film's partisan cells operate with hierarchical discipline and ideological indoctrination, mirroring the PPR/AL's structures rather than the decentralized, patriotic networks of the dominant Home Army (Armia Krajowa, AK), which historically prioritized national liberation encompassing diverse political and social elements.[45] This narrative choice aligns with the socialist realist mandates of early Polish People's Republic cinema, where rhetoric frames the struggle as class warfare against fascist-capitalist exploitation, subordinating national unity to proletarian mobilization.[46]Protagonist Stach's evolution from opportunistic factory worker to committed fighter illustrates personal vendettas—such as revenge for a friend's death—as catalysts for ideological alignment, yet the film universalizes these into a collective proletarian awakening, sidelining historical records of resistance motivations rooted in religious faith, nationalism, or individual honor prevalent across AK units.[11] Such portrayal downplays the pluralism of Polish underground activities, where non-communist groups like the AK conducted over 1,000 armed operations by 1943 without mandatory class-based framing, instead fostering cross-class solidarity against occupation.[47] By attributing resistance efficacy to Marxist-Leninist education scenes, the film imposes a causal chain from personal loss to class consciousness, reflecting postwar communist historiography that retrofitted antifascism to justify one-party rule.[48]The film's symbolism reinforces ideological continuity, culminating in Stach inheriting and passing on a pistol from fallen comrades, emblematic of an unending proletarian struggle transcending individual lives and linking wartime resistance to future socialist construction.[11] This motif echoes Soviet-influenced narratives prioritizing perpetual class antagonism over resolved national victory, diverging from AK's ethos of restoring Polish sovereignty post-liberation, as evidenced by their coordination of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising independent of PPR directives.[45] While Wajda, a former AK courier, navigated censorship by including mandated pro-AL sequences, the resultant framing elevates communist collectivism as the authentic antifascist vanguard, conditioning viewer perception of resistance as inherently tied to class dialectics rather than multifaceted patriotism.[47]
Reception
Initial Critical Response
Upon its premiere in Poland on January 17, 1955, A Generation was hailed by domestic critics as a foundational work of the Polish Film School, representing a departure from rigid socialist realism toward more expressive cinematic techniques influenced by Italian neorealism.[11] Reviewers in state-aligned outlets praised its depiction of proletarian youth radicalized against Nazi occupation, emphasizing the film's anti-fascist energy and alignment with communist-led resistance narratives as a vital contribution to postwar Polish cinema.[21] The picture's screening at the 16th Venice International Film Festival later that year drew international notice, with commentators noting its blend of personal drama and historical grit, though it did not secure a top prize amid competition from established Western entries.In France, where neorealist aesthetics resonated, early assessments commended the film's raw location shooting and focus on ordinary lives amid wartime upheaval, positioning it as a Eastern European echo of Rossellini's style.[49] Exposure in the United States remained minimal during the mid-1950s, constrained by Cold War suspicions of Soviet-bloc productions and limited distribution channels for non-aligned cinema.[50]While overt acclaim dominated Polish discourse, subtle reservations emerged in select reviews regarding the narrative's occasional descent into melodrama and schematic character arcs, potentially diluting its realism; such critiques were tempered, as filmmakers and commentators navigated strict postwar censorship that penalized deviations from official ideological lines.[21][11] State oversight, including script approvals and post-production interventions, ensured that public dissent risked suppression, fostering an environment where praise for the film's vigor overshadowed analytical depth until the early 1960s thaw.[11]
Subsequent Evaluations
In analyses from the 1980s and 1990s, scholars highlighted Pokolenie's technical achievements, particularly its innovative editing rhythms characterized by rapid cuts that conveyed the chaos of wartime urban life and influenced the stylistic foundations of the Polish Film School.[45] These montages, drawing from neorealist influences while adapting to postwar Polish constraints, prefigured the dynamic pacing in subsequent works by Wajda and contemporaries like Jerzy Kawalerowicz, marking a shift from rigid socialist realist dogma toward more expressive formalism.[36] However, critics in this period also observed formulaic elements in the plotting, such as archetypal character arcs and ideological resolutions that adhered to era-specific narrative conventions, limiting psychological depth compared to Wajda's later trilogy entries.[51]Following Poland's transition from communism in 1989, Wajda reflected on his debut as a product of self-imposed compromises amid state censorship, noting in interviews that filmmakers internalized restrictions to navigate approval processes, diluting unvarnished depictions of resistance motivations.[52] He contrasted this with his post-1989 output, including Katyń (2007), which directly confronted Soviet atrocities without ideological filtration, allowing for a more causal examination of historical traumas unburdened by prior regime demands.[53] These admissions underscored evolving self-assessments, where early works like Pokolenie were seen as foundational yet constrained by the need to balance artistic intent with systemic pressures.[16]Retrospective evaluations maintain high regard for Pokolenie's role in launching Wajda's career and the Polish School, with qualitative scholarship debating its enduring interpretive value in light of de-Stalinized historiography that reveals fuller spectra of wartime alliances and betrayals.[54] While limited aggregator data reflects strong critical consensus among available reviews, post-Cold War critiques emphasize contextual reevaluations, weighing the film's prescient generational themes against its era-bound lens on class mobilization and antifascist unity.[11] This diachronic scrutiny affirms technical and thematic innovations but questions absolute historical fidelity amid archival disclosures since 1989.[55]
Controversies
Historical Accuracy
The film Pokolenie portrays the Polish Workers' Party (PPR) and its armed formations, such as the People's Guard (Gwardia Ludowa, GL), as dominant forces in organizing sabotage and partisan warfare among Warsaw's factory workers during the early occupation period around 1942–1943. In reality, the Home Army (Armia Krajowa, AK), subordinate to the Polish government-in-exile in London, executed the vast majority of documented sabotage operations, intelligence activities, and armed engagements across occupied Poland, with estimates exceeding 30,000 such actions attributed primarily to AK networks. Communist-led groups like the GL, formed in 1942 under PPR auspices, remained small-scale and localized, comprising fewer than 10,000 fighters by mid-1943 and focusing on sporadic raids rather than systematic disruption of German infrastructure.[56][57][58]Depictions of rapid, large-scale mobilization of urban proletarians into combat units in Warsaw overstate the character of resistance in 1942, when activities centered on clandestine intelligence collection, targeted assassinations, and limited diversions rather than overt factory-based uprisings. Historical accounts emphasize that early wartime resistance in the Warsaw region prioritized infiltration of German facilities for espionage—contributing over 40% of Allied intelligence on Eastern Front operations—alongside rural networks in peasant battalions, with urban efforts scaling up only after 1943 amid intensified German conscription and deportations. The film's emphasis on immediate worker militancy thus compresses timelines and amplifies proletarian agency beyond empirical patterns.[59][60]Key omissions include the AK's clashes with Soviet partisans and the Red Army's inaction during the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, where advancing Soviet forces paused operations on August 14, enabling German reinforcements to suppress the AK-led revolt after 63 days of fighting, resulting in over 200,000 civilian deaths. These events, verified through declassified Allied reports and Polish underground dispatches, highlight inter-allied tensions absent from the film's narrative of unified anti-fascist struggle. Conversely, the portrayal of German reprisals—such as collective executions following sabotage—aligns with occupation policies that imposed death penalties on civilians for resistance acts, contributing to a total Polish death toll of 5.47 to 5.67 million between 1939 and 1945, including widespread youth conscription into labor and combat.[61][27]
Propaganda and Bias
The film A Generation reflects the ideological imperatives of Poland's Stalinist-era cultural policy, which mandated socialist realist depictions prioritizing class conflict and the communist Polish Workers' Party (PPR) as the authentic driver of antifascist struggle.[22] Produced in 1954-1955 amid strict regime oversight, it frames resistance through proletarian protagonists drawn to PPR organizers, implicitly subordinating non-communist elements to a narrative of worker vanguardism that echoed official doctrine marginalizing rival groups as outdated or bourgeois.[4] This approach served to retroactively legitimize postwar communist rule by associating it with wartime heroism, a pattern evident in contemporaneous Polish cinema that elevated PPR-affiliated partisans while downplaying broader coalitions.[62]The portrayal's selective omissions fostered a subtext of class exclusivity in resistance, critiqued by conservative Polish analysts for eliding the Catholic and nationalist underpinnings central to the Armia Krajowa's (AK) mass mobilization and ethical framework, thereby distorting the pluralistic reality of Polish opposition to Nazism.[63] Such framing stemmed from production incentives under Stalinism, where state-controlled Film Polski required alignment with Marxist-Leninist historiography to secure resources and distribution, as filmmakers navigated censorship that rewarded narratives glorifying proletarian agency over national unity.[64] Right-leaning evaluations highlight this as an intentional slant prioritizing ideological conformity over comprehensive depiction, contrasting with the film's residual vitality in evoking generational antifascist urgency.[65]Wajda himself later distanced from the debut's accommodations, attributing elements to the era's pervasive orthodoxies and his own early career pressures, a reflection echoed in his subsequent works critiquing communist distortions.[66] While achieving raw emotional authenticity in antifascist themes, the bias compromised pluralistic fidelity, underscoring how regime-enforced historiography traded historical nuance for propagandistic coherence.[63]
Legacy
Cinematic Influence
A Generation initiated Andrzej Wajda's war trilogy, comprising Kanał (1957) and Ashes and Diamonds (1958), which pioneered a stark, location-shot realism in Polish depictions of World War II occupation and resistance, evoking the raw urban devastation through on-site filming in Warsaw ruins.[11] This stylistic foundation drew from Italian neorealism, emphasizing non-professional casts and unadorned narratives to convey the moral disorientation of youth amid conflict.[67] The film's release in 1955 positioned it as a cornerstone of the Polish Film School, a post-Stalinist movement that prioritized auteur-driven explorations of national trauma over prescriptive socialist realism.[1]Within Polish cinema, A Generation influenced contemporaries like Andrzej Munk and Jerzy Kawalerowicz, who adapted its fusion of ideological undertones—such as communist partisanship—with individualistic directorial signatures, fostering a template for historical introspection that informed the experimental Polish New Wave of the 1960s.[68] Directors in this lineage, including Roman Polanski and Wojciech Has, extended Wajda's emphasis on subjective wartime memory, blending documentary verisimilitude with symbolic expression to critique conformity.[69]Beyond Poland, the film's neorealist techniques resonated in Eastern European productions resisting cinematic dogma during the Khrushchev thaw, paralleling post-1956 Hungarian filmmakers' shifts toward personal realism in addressing suppressed histories, as seen in works exploring revolution and occupation.[70] Its global ripples extended to the French and British New Waves, where Wajda's raw aesthetic and youth-focused narratives informed emerging directors' rejection of studio-bound traditions.[9]Wajda's trajectory from A Generation culminated in an honorary Academy Award in 2000, recognizing five decades of direction that originated in this debut's innovative wartime lens, frequently referenced in analyses of Cold War-era European cinema for its role in elevating Polish film internationally.[71][2]
Modern Availability and Restorations
In 2005, the Criterion Collection issued A Generation on DVD as part of the box set Andrzej Wajda: Three War Films, which includes English subtitles and supplemental materials such as an essay contextualizing the film's production during the post-Stalin Thaw in Poland.[72][11] This edition marked a key step in making the film accessible to international audiences in restored analog format, though it predated widespread digital upgrades.[73]A significant advancement came in 2022 with Second Run's limited-edition Blu-ray box set of Wajda's War Trilogy, presenting A Generation from a new 2K digital restoration—the first Blu-ray release for the film—sourced from original 35mm materials to enhance visual clarity and preserve the original black-and-white cinematography.[74] This UK-based edition, distributed internationally, supplanted earlier analog formats like limited 1980s VHS releases, which offered no restoration and have since become obsolete for modern viewing.[75]As of 2023, the film streams in high definition on the Criterion Channel, providing subtitled access without physical media and reflecting ongoing digitization efforts for archival Polish cinema.[76] No major theatrical remakes have emerged, but the restored versions support periodic archival screenings at film festivals, such as those organized by Polish cultural institutes.[77]Distribution remains governed by Polish state-affiliated entities, including successor organizations to Film Polski, which hold copyrights and prioritize controlled releases to maintain artistic integrity amid evolving cultural policies in Poland.[8] These factors limit widespread free access, channeling availability through licensed platforms and boutique distributors rather than broad public domain entry.[74]