Artikel: Cinema of the Czech Republic GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi

    • Source: Cinema of the Czech Republic
    • Czech cinema comprises the cinema of the Czech Republic as well as contributions to cinema by Czech people during the Austrian-Hungarian Empire period.
      The earliest Czech cinema began in 1898 with Jan Kříženecký, later major contributions were made by interwar directors such as Karel Lamač and Martin Frič, with Barrandov Studios founded in 1933. During WWII, filmmakers like Otakar Vávra continued working despite Nazi occupation.
      In the Post-war period, the industry was nationalized, with The Proud Princess (1952) becoming a record hit. Domestically, the most viewed Czech film ever, it was seen by 8 million people. The 1958 film The Fabulous World of Jules Verne is considered the most internationally successful Czech film ever made; soon after its release it was distributed to 72 countries and received widespread attention.
      The 1960s saw the Czechoslovak New Wave emerge, featuring directors Miloš Forman and Jiří Menzel. The 1970s–80s focused on comedies and family films. In the 1990s, Marketa Lazarová was voted the all-time best Czech movie in a poll of Czech film critics and publicists.


      History


      The first Czech film director and cinematographer was Jan Kříženecký, who started filming short documentaries in Prague in the second half of 1898. The first permanent cinema house was founded by Viktor Ponrepo in 1907 in Prague.
      Some early findings enabling the birth of cinematography were made by Czech scientists in the 19th century such as by Jan Evangelista Purkyně.


      = Interwar period

      =
      Among the prominent directors were Karel Lamač, Karl Anton, Svatopluk Innemann, Přemysl Pražský, Martin Frič and Gustav Machatý. The first Czechoslovak film fully made with synchronized sound is considered to be Když struny lkají, released in September 1930. Tonka of the Gallows, released in February 1930, was shot as a silent film and the sound was added in France. Barrandov Studios was launched by Miloš Havel in 1933, which started a Czech film industry film boom. It is the largest film studio in the country and one of the larger in Europe.


      = World War II

      =
      During World War II, many major pre-war film directors continued to make films, including Otakar Vávra, Martin Frič, Miroslav Cikán, Jan Sviták (who was murdered at the end of the war by an anti-fascist mob), Vladimír Slavínský, František Čáp, Zdeněk Gina Hašler (who emigrated to the USA after the war) and Václav Binovec.
      Vladimír Čech and Václav Krška started their careers during World War II. Scenario writer Karel Steklý turned to film directing at the end of the war and maintained both careers until his death.
      Well-known actor Rudolf Hrušínský (born 1920) also directed films during this period.


      = After World War II

      =
      Many prominent people of Czech cinema left the country before World War II including directors Karel Lamač and Gustav Machatý, cinematographer Otto Heller, actors Hugo Haas and Jiří Voskovec and producer Josef Auerbach. Director Vladislav Vančura was murdered by Nazis as were popular actor and signer Karel Hašler, actress Anna Letenská and writer Karel Poláček. Studio owner Miloš Havel and actresses Lída Baarová and Adina Mandlová went into exile in Germany or Austria after they were accused of collaborating with Nazis during the war. In 1943, Czech Film Archive (NFA) was established in Prague.
      In 1945, the Czechoslovak film industry was nationalized. The Proud Princess, the most viewed Czech film ever, was released in 1952. It was seen by 8,222,695 people. The film also won a prize for a child film at Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.
      Famous movies of the 1950s include Journey to the Beginning of Time, The Good Soldier Švejk, The Emperor and the Golem, The Princess with the Golden Star, The Fabulous World of Jules Verne, Proud Princess (the most viewed Czech film ever) and Once Upon a Time, There Was a King....


      = New Wave

      =
      Main Article: Czechoslovakian New Wave
      The Czechoslovak New Wave frequently is associated with the early works of directors such as Miloš Forman, Věra Chytilová, Jiří Menzel and others, but works by older, established Czechoslovak directors such as Karel Kachyňa and Vojtěch Jasný are placed in this category. Encompassing a broad range of works in the early to mid-1960s, the Czechoslovak New Wave cannot be categorized 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 was absurd, black humour and an interest in the concerns of ordinary people, particularly when faced with larger historical or political changes. The acid western comedy film Lemonade Joe was a famous parody of old-time westerns. Cinematic influences included Italian neorealism and the French New Wave, but the Czechoslovak New Wave also builds organically on developments in Czechoslovak cinema in the late 1950s when the influence of Stalinism in the film industry declined.


      = 1970s to 1989

      =
      Many of the directors active in the previous periods continued to work in this period, including Otakar Vávra and Jiří Menzel. During the period of normalization, only the movies that Czech authorities considered harmless were made. Therefore the most successful movies from this era are comedies, sci-fi and family movies, like in the previous periods. Three Wishes for Cinderella, a fairy-tale film from 1973, became a holiday classic in Czechoslovakia and several European countries, including Germany, Switzerland, Spain, Sweden and Norway.


      = 1990s and beyond

      =
      Successful Czech films made after the Velvet Revolution include Kolya, Divided We Fall, Cosy Dens and Walking Too Fast. In the 1990s, Marketa Lazarová was voted the all-time best Czech movie in a 1998 poll of Czech film critics and publicists.


      List of Czech films


      List of Czechoslovak films 1898–1990
      List of Czech films (List of Czech Republic films) 1990–today
      List of Czech animated films
      List of Czech films considered the best
      List of most expensive Czech films
      List of highest-grossing Czech films


      List of notable Czech directors




      Nominations and awards




      = Nominations for Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film

      =
      1965 - The Shop on Main Street by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos - Won Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film
      1966 - Loves of a Blonde by Miloš Forman
      1967 - Closely Watched Trains by Jiří Menzel - Won Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film
      1968 - The Firemen's Ball by Miloš Forman
      1986 - My Sweet Little Village by Jiří Menzel
      1991 - The Elementary School by Jan Svěrák
      1996 - Kolya by Jan Svěrák - Won Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film
      2000 - Divided We Fall
      2003 - Želary by Ondřej Trojan


      = Contenders at Cannes Film Festival

      =
      1946 - Men Without Wings by František Čáp - Won Palm d'Or
      1946 - Vánoční sen by Karel Zeman - Won Grand Prix International for best short fiction film
      1946 - Springman and the SS by Jiří Trnka
      1951 - The Trap by Martin Frič
      1954 - A Drop Too Much by Břetislav Pojar - Won Best Puppet Film
      1955 - Dog's Heads by Martin Frič
      1955 - The Good Soldier Schweik by Jiří Trnka
      1956 - Dalibor by Václav Krška
      1956 - The Dolls of Jiří Trnka by Bruno Šefranka - Won Special Mention - Short Film
      1957 - Lost Children by Miloš Makovec
      1958 - Suburban Romance by Zbyněk Brynych
      1958 - Než nám narostla křídla by Jiří Brdečka - Won Special Prize for Short Film
      1959 - Desire by Vojtěch Jasný
      1959 - Butterflies Don't Live Here by Miro Bernat - Won Palme d'Or for Best Short Film
      1960 - When the Woman Butts In by Zdeněk Podskalský
      1960 - Pozor by Jiří Brdečka
      1961 - Fantazie pro levou ruku a lidské svědomí by Pavel Hobl
      1962 - Man in Outer Space by Oldřich Lipský
      1962 - Člověk pod vodou by Jiří Brdečka
      1963 - The Cassandra Cat by Vojtěch Jasný - Won Special Jury Prize
      1963 - Železničáři by Evald Schorm
      1964 - The Cry by Jaromil Jireš
      1964 - Flora nese smrt by Jiří Papoušek
      1965 - The Shop on Main Street by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos - Won Special Mention for actors
      1965 - Johann Sebastian Bach: Fantasy in G minor by Jan Švankmajer - Won Prix du Jury for Short Film
      1966 - The Pipes by Vojtěch Jasný
      1966 - Číslice by Pavel Procházka
      1967 - Hotel for Strangers by Antonín Máša
      1968 - A Report on the Party and the Guests by Jan Němec
      1968 - The Firemen's Ball by Miloš Forman
      1969 - End of a Priest by Evald Schorm
      1969 - All My Compatriots by Vojtěch Jasný - Won Best Director
      1969 - Moc osudu by Jiří Brdečka
      1970 - Fruit of Paradise by Věra Chytilová
      1972 - Hvězda Betlémská by Hermína Týrlová
      1974 - Leonarduv deník by Jan Švankmajer
      1980 - Krychle by Zdeněk Smetana - Won Jury Prize for Short Film
      1981 - Diskžokej by Jiří Barta
      1981 - Král a skřítek by Lubomír Beneš
      1989 - Manly Games by Jan Švankmajer
      1990 - The Ear by Karel Kachyňa
      1990 - Portrét by Pavel Koutský
      1990 - Time of the Servants by Irena Pavlásková - Caméra d'Or - Special Mention


      = Contenders at Venice Film Festival

      =
      1934 - Ecstasy by Gustav Machatý - Won Best Director
      1934 - The River by Josef Rovenský - Won Best Director
      1934 - Bouře nad Tatrami by Tomáš Trnka - Won Best Director
      1934 - Maryša by Josef Rovenský - Won Special Recommendation
      1937 - Batalion by Miroslav Cikán - Won Special Recommendation
      1939 - Humoreska by Otakar Vávra
      1939 - Macoun the Tramp by Ladislav Brom
      1939 - Sklenice i chléb by Jaroslav Tuzar
      1940 - Muž z neznáma by Martin Frič
      1941 - Nocturnal Butterfly by František Čáp - Won Targa di segnalazione
      1947 - Capek's Tales by Martin Frič
      1947 - The Czech Year by Jiří Trnka
      1947 - The Strike by Karel Steklý - Won Golden Lion
      1955 - From My Life by Václav Krška
      1958 - The Wolf Trap by Jiří Weiss - Won New Cinema Award and FIPRESCI Prize
      1963 - The Golden Fern by Jiří Weiss
      1963 - Mud Covered City by Václav Táborský - Won Lion of San Marco for Best Documentary
      1965 - Loves of a Blonde by Miloš Forman
      1965 - Útěk do větru by Václav Táborský - Won Lion of San Marco
      1966 - Ptáci koháci by Jiří Torman - Won Plate
      1966 - Krtek a raketa by Zdeněk Miler - Won Recreative Children's Film
      1969 - Čest a sláva by Hynek Bočan - Won Best Foreign Film
      1981 - Cutting It Short by Jiří Menzel
      1990 - Martha and I by Jiří Weiss
      2019 - The Painted Bird by Václav Marhoul


      = Contenders at Moscow Film Festival

      =
      1935 - Workers, Let's Go by Martin Frič - Special jury prize for actors Jiří Voskovec and Jan Werich
      1959 - Escape from the Shadows by Jiří Sequens - Golden Medal
      1961 - Fetters by Karel Kachyňa
      1963 - Death Is Called Engelchen by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos - Golden Prize
      1965 - Atentát by Jiří Sequens - Golden Prize
      1967 - Romance for Bugle by Otakar Vávra - Special Silver Prize


      See also



      Czech Lion - Annual awards of Czech Film and Television Academy
      Barrandov Studios - Prague's film studios
      Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
      Finále Plzeň Film Festival - Film Festival of Czech and Slovak films
      Film Festival Zlín - International Film Festival for Children and Youth
      Czechoslovak New Wave
      List of films Czech films considered the best
      List of Czech Academy Award winners and nominees
      Cinema of the world


      Further reading


      Passek, Jean-Loup; Zaoralová, Eva, eds. (1996). Le cinéma tchèque et slovaque. Paris: Centre national d'art et de culture Georges Pompidou. ISBN 9782858508921. OCLC 415079480.


      References




      External links


      GreenCine primer on Czech and Slovak Cinema
      History of Czech cinematography Archived 2014-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
      An article on places from Czech movies

    Kata Kunci Pencarian:

    cinema of the czech republiccinema city czech republic