4 min read • 695 words
Introduction
A young man sits in a stark room, bottling his own tears for sale. This arresting image is the heart of Łukasz Ronduda’s provocative new film, ‘Tell Me What You Feel,’ premiering at the International Film Festival Rotterdam. Far from a simple biopic, the feature plunges audiences into a profound exploration of modern masculinity, commodified emotion, and the fragile art of human connection in a transactional age.
From Canvas to Cinema: The Genesis of a Radical Idea
The film is loosely inspired by the real-life conceptual art project of Patryk Różycki, a young Polish artist. Różycki’s original performance piece, ‘Tear Dealer,’ involved him literally selling his tears as art objects, challenging perceptions of value and vulnerability. Director Łukasz Ronduda, known for interrogating the Polish avant-garde, transforms this premise into a nuanced narrative. He uses Różycki’s framework not for documentary but as a springboard into a fictionalized, emotionally charged world where the metaphor becomes a man’s reality.
The Currency of Sorrow: Deconstructing Vulnerable Masculinity
At its core, ‘Tell Me What You Feel’ confronts the rigid scripts of traditional masculinity. The protagonist’s tear-dealing is a radical act of rebellion against the stoicism often demanded of men. By packaging his most intimate emotions as a product, he creates a paradoxical safe space for his vulnerability. The film asks: In a society that often shuns male emotional display, must pain be monetized to be seen as valid? This central conflict mirrors a global conversation about mental health and emotional literacy among men.
A Fragile Ecosystem: Love in the Shadow of Commerce
The narrative deepens as the tear dealer enters a complex romantic relationship. Here, Ronduda poses a delicate question: Can authentic intimacy survive when one’s deepest feelings are also a branded commodity? The relationship becomes a microcosm of modern love, where personal boundaries blur and emotional labor is scrutinized. The film dissects the tension between genuine sharing and performative emotion, exploring whether the very act of selling tears corrupts the purity of the feeling or, conversely, sanctifies it through ritual.
The Polish New Wave: Contextualizing Ronduda’s Vision
Ronduda’s work is part of a vibrant resurgence in Polish cinema that favors philosophical inquiry over conventional plot. Filmmakers like Małgorzata Szumowska and Jan P. Matuszyński also explore societal pressures with a stark, poetic lens. ‘Tell Me What You Feel’ fits within this movement, using visual metaphor and restrained performance to provoke thought. Its selection for IFFR’s prestigious Big Screen Competition highlights its significance as a work of artistic audacity, not just regional interest.
Beyond the Bottle: The Film’s Formal and Aesthetic Choices
Early glimpses suggest a film of deliberate, almost clinical composition, mirroring the protagonist’s controlled environment. Expect long takes, minimalist sound design, and a color palette that shifts from sterile to warm as emotions break through. This aesthetic is not mere style; it is the film’s language. The camera doesn’t just observe the tear dealer—it inhabits his psychological space, making the audience complicit in both his isolation and his rare moments of unguarded release.
Audience as Client: The Interactive Nature of the Narrative
The film’s very title, ‘Tell Me What You Feel,’ is a direct solicitation to the viewer. Ronduda extends the project’s conceptual roots by implicating us in the economy of emotion. As we watch, are we passive observers or tacit customers? The film challenges our own comfort with displayed vulnerability, forcing a reflection on how we value and consume the emotional stories of others, both on-screen and in life.
Conclusion: The Future of Feeling in a Digital Age
‘Tell Me What You Feel’ arrives at a moment when human emotion is increasingly parsed, packaged, and projected online. Its vision of a tear dealer feels less like absurdist fiction and more like a logical extreme of our times. The film’s ultimate power lies not in providing answers, but in framing the profound questions with such compelling clarity. It suggests that the future of emotional health may depend on our collective ability to reclaim vulnerability not as a currency, but as a cornerstone of shared humanity, freely given and received.

