Andrzej Munk (16 October 1921 – 20 September 1961) was a Polish film director, screen writer and documentalist. He was one of the most influential artists of the post-Stalinist period in the People's Republic of Poland. His feature films Man on the Tracks (Człowiek na torze, 1956), Eroica (Heroism, 1958), Bad Luck (Zezowate szczęście, 1960), and Passenger (Pasażerka 1963), are considered classics of the Polish Film School developed in mid-1950s. He died as a result of a car crash in Kompina in a head-on collision with a truck.
Passenger
(Director)
A Fairy Tale
(Director)
Bad Luck
(Director)
Eroica
(Director)
Man on the Tracks
(Director)
Men of the Blue Cross
(Director)
A Walk in the Old City of Warsaw
(Director)
Peasant Diaries
(Writer)
Peasant Diaries
(Director)
Science Closer to Life
(Director)
Science Closer to Life
(Cinematography)
A Railwayman's Word
(Writer)
Sunday Morning
(Director)
Con bravura
(Director)
Passenger
(Screenplay)
The Stars Must Burn
(Writer)
Zaczelo sie w Hiszpanii
(Director)
A Walk in the Old City of Warsaw
(Screenplay)
Sunday Morning
(Screenplay)
Young Art
(Director)
The Stars Must Burn
(Director)
Destination Nowa Huta!
(Director)
A Railwayman's Word
(Director)
Polish Film Chronicle 59/52AB
(Director)
Man on the Tracks
(Writer)
Young Art
(Writer)
Maj pracy walki pokoju
(Director of Photography)
Men of the Blue Cross
(Writer)