Cinema of the Czech Republic
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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The Czech Republic (both as an independent country and as a part of former Czechoslovakia) was a seedbed for many acclaimed film directors.
Three Czech/Czechoslovak movies that won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film were The Shop on Main Street (Obchod na korze) by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos in 1965, Closely Watched Trains (Ostře sledované vlaky) by Jiří Menzel in 1967 and Kolya (Kolja) by Jan Svěrák in 1996. Several others were nominated.
The Czechoslovak New Wave, the golden age of Czech cinema, is most frequently associated with the early works of directors such as Miloš Forman, Věra Chytilová, Jiří Menzel and others, although works by older, more established Czechoslovak directors such as Karel Kachyňa and Vojtěch Jasný are also placed in this category. Encompassing a broad range of fresh and original works in the early to mid 1960s, the Czechoslovak New Wave cannot be pinned down to any one style or approach to filmmaking. Examples range from highly stylised, even avant-garde, literary adaptions using historical themes (e.g. Jan Němec's Diamonds of the Night (Démanty noci)) to semi-improvised comedies with contemporary subjects and amateur actors (e.g., Miloš Forman's The Firemen's Ball (Hoří, má panenko)). However, a frequent feature of films from this period were their absurd, black humour and an interest in the concerns of ordinary people, particularly when faced with larger historical or political changes. Cinematic influences included Italian neorealism and the French New Wave, although the Czechoslovak New Wave also builds organically on developments in Czechoslovak cinema in the late 1950s when directors broke free from the influence of Stalinism in the film industry.
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History of Czech animation
The roots of Czech puppet animation began in the mid-1940s when puppet theater operators, Eduard Hofman and Jiří Trnka founded the Poetic animation school, Bratří v Triku. Since that time animation has expanded and flourished.
- 1945: Dedek Zasadil repu ("My grandfather planted a beet")
- 1946: Zvírátka to petrovstí ("Animals and bandits")
- 1946: Perak SS ("The jumper and the men of the SS")
- 1946: Darek ("The Gift")
- 1947: Špalíček ("The Czech Year")
- 1949: Román s basou ("Story of a bass")
- 1949: Certuv mlýn ("The Devil's Mill")
- 1949: Arie prerie ("Song of the Prairie")
- 1949: Cisaruv Slavik ("The Emperor's Nightingale")
Czech films
- List of Czechoslovakian films - 1990
- List of Czech Republic films post 1896
List of notable Czech directors
- Věra Chytilová
- Saša Gedeon
- Jan Hřebejk
- Jaromil Jireš
- Karel Kachyňa
- Oldřich Lipský
- Miloš Forman
- Gustav Machatý
- Jiří Menzel
- Jan Němec
- Ivan Passer
- Břetislav Pojar
- Karel Reisz, Czech-born British director
- Bohdan Sláma
- Jan Švankmajer
- Jan Svěrák
- Jiří Trnka, puppet motion-picture animator
- František Vláčil
- Petr Zelenka
See also
- Barrandov Studios - Prague's famous film studios (Hollywood of the East).
- prestigious Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
- Film Festival Zlin - International Film Festival for Children and Youth
- Ateliery Bonton Zlin - Animation Film Production Company