Daisies


1h 14m 1967
Daisies

Brief Synopsis

Experimental comedy in which two women decide to "go bad."

Film Details

Also Known As
Sedmikrásky
Genre
Comedy
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 25 Oct 1967
Production Company
Barrandov Film Studio
Distribution Company
Sigma III Corp.
Country
Czechoslovakia

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 14m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Eastmancolor)

Synopsis

Having concluded that everything in the world is spoiled, two teenaged girls, both named Marie, decide that they also should be spoiled. They order dinner at an elderly man's expense, running up an exorbitant restaurant bill without in any way reciprocating his generosity. They steal money from the ladies' room attendant, dress extravagantly and provoke public astonishment, destroy each other's clothing, set little fires, tear out each other's hair--all to prove that "we exist." Marie II tires of the butterfly collector with whom she has been having an affair. After creating scenes at a nightclub, in the countryside, and on a train, they wander into a hotel where they find an elegant banquet table, which is an irresistible object for their playful destructiveness. They throw pies and salads at each other, break dishes, overturn furniture, and finally swing from a chandelier that crashes through an open window under their weight, throwing them into the river. Remorseful at the havoc they have wrought on the dining room, they go back and diligently return it to a lunatic facsimile of its former state. They lie down on the table to rest after making futile restorative efforts, wondering if they are really happy, and again the chandelier falls from the ceiling, this time with a mushroom-like explosion. And with this action come the words: "Dedication--To all those whose indignation is limited to a smashed-up salad."

Film Details

Also Known As
Sedmikrásky
Genre
Comedy
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 25 Oct 1967
Production Company
Barrandov Film Studio
Distribution Company
Sigma III Corp.
Country
Czechoslovakia

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 14m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Eastmancolor)

Articles

Daisies -


Following on the heels of other film movements around the word pushing the boundaries of what movies could do, the Czechoslovak New Wave attracted artists anxious to move beyond the confines of established storytelling and challenge the perceptions of character and plot in unconventional narratives. At the forefront of this movement was Věra Chytilová, a film student who broke every rule applied to film and then rewrote several of her own. Her 1966 film, Daisies (Sedmikrasky), became her most well known work as well as the film that would get her banned from working in the industry for eight years.

The film concerns the actions of two teenage girls, both named Marie, played by Jitka Cerhová and Ivana Karbanová. And it is the actions of the two girls that make up the entire plot, as it were, of Daisies. This is not a movie of linear drive or story motivated characters, rather, it is an observation of two characters, doing mostly absurd things in mundane settings. The film starts with shots of mechanical gears in motion, accompanied by music, underneath the credits. The credits and music both stop abruptly, every few seconds, to include shots of aerial warfare taken from the U.S. Naval footage from the Pacific theater of World War II.

After the credits, we join our two protagonists as they muse on the ways of the world. Marie I and Marie II are seated against a wall, facing the camera, with their movements accompanied by the squeaking sounds of rusted machinery, making them appear more robotic than human. Marie I (Jitka Cerhová) asks Marie II (Ivana Karbanová) what she's doing and Marie I proclaims, "Being a virgin." At least, that's what the subtitles say. The word used, "panna," can mean both "virgin" or "doll" and given their movements, "doll" seems more appropriate. Either way, this opening scene establishes both as innocents in the world and their very discussion revolves around the badness of the world and how they, too, will now be bad. Simple enough. But what follows is no straightforward excursion into the lives of two young women rebelling against the world but one filmmaker rebelling against the way meaning and story interlock.

To describe the plot of this movie would not only be a futile exercise, as it would just be a relaying of separate actions, one after another, with no discernible story, but it would also greatly miss the point. There is a story to Daisies, it's just not in the movie. It is the movie. It's how the movie is made, where it starts and where and how it ends. Our two young adventurous women feast upon the world (both literally and figuratively as they consume copious amounts of food throughout the course of the film) and, in the end, find guilt and anxiety the reward for working against the state. After gorging themselves on more food than most people have ever seen in one room, they mash it, walk on it, throw it at each other and trample their surroundings until all lies in ruin. After a brief detour to a drowning death for their sins, they are resurrected and desperate to right their wrongs.

Here's where Věra Chytilová turns Marie I and Marie II into perfect wards and representatives of the state. They exploit and use and waste and then, repeating the mantra of the brainwashed worker, that work makes one happy, they repair their damage but in such a haphazard and laughable way that it would be better to leave things as they were. And when it's all over, the decadence of the rich and powerful, in the form of a gaudy chandelier, crushes their very existence.

Daisies is not a tepid undertaking, a mild statement or a half-hearted film student exercise. It is a bold and exciting journey into the mythos of the state, modern life and the story of film. The very state Chytilová lampooned banned the movie for its excess, specifically the wasting of food, and the Soviet invasion in 1968 essentially made her persona non grata until 1976. When an artist makes a statement that no one in power can understand, you can bet it's going to be banned, if only to keep the masses from projecting onto it their own interpretations and meaning.

But Daisies isn't just some clever artistic damnation of the world, it's a celebration of cinema itself. Chytilová's visuals are simply stunning. Long before switching visual styles throughout a movie (color to black and white, smooth to grainy, etc) became popular in the eighties from the works of Oliver Stone to MTV videos, Daisies did so with ease. The film uses different styles, alternating time frames, redundant sets and surreal imagery (at one point, going up in dumb waiter, the two Maries look through the opening at each passing floor to see things like outdoor settings and symphony orchestras as they go by) to make the film into one of the grandest and purest cinematic creations to come out of not only the Czechoslovak New Wave, but the sixties period.

Daisies is more than just a great movie. In many ways, Daisies is the movies.

Director: Vera Chytilová Screenplay: Vera Chytilová (screenplay and story), Ester Krumbachová, Pavel Jurácek Original Music: Jirí Slitr, Jirí Sust Cinematography: Jaroslav Kucera Film Editing: Miroslav Hájek Production Design: Karel Lier Set Decoration: Frantisek Straka Costume Design: Ester Krumbachová Cast: Ivana Karbanová (Marie II), Jitka Cerhová (Marie I ), Marie Cesková, Jirina Myskova, Marcela Brezinová, Julius Albert (Man About Town)

By Greg Ferrara

SOURCES: Wikipedia IMDB
Daisies -

Daisies -

Following on the heels of other film movements around the word pushing the boundaries of what movies could do, the Czechoslovak New Wave attracted artists anxious to move beyond the confines of established storytelling and challenge the perceptions of character and plot in unconventional narratives. At the forefront of this movement was Věra Chytilová, a film student who broke every rule applied to film and then rewrote several of her own. Her 1966 film, Daisies (Sedmikrasky), became her most well known work as well as the film that would get her banned from working in the industry for eight years. The film concerns the actions of two teenage girls, both named Marie, played by Jitka Cerhová and Ivana Karbanová. And it is the actions of the two girls that make up the entire plot, as it were, of Daisies. This is not a movie of linear drive or story motivated characters, rather, it is an observation of two characters, doing mostly absurd things in mundane settings. The film starts with shots of mechanical gears in motion, accompanied by music, underneath the credits. The credits and music both stop abruptly, every few seconds, to include shots of aerial warfare taken from the U.S. Naval footage from the Pacific theater of World War II. After the credits, we join our two protagonists as they muse on the ways of the world. Marie I and Marie II are seated against a wall, facing the camera, with their movements accompanied by the squeaking sounds of rusted machinery, making them appear more robotic than human. Marie I (Jitka Cerhová) asks Marie II (Ivana Karbanová) what she's doing and Marie I proclaims, "Being a virgin." At least, that's what the subtitles say. The word used, "panna," can mean both "virgin" or "doll" and given their movements, "doll" seems more appropriate. Either way, this opening scene establishes both as innocents in the world and their very discussion revolves around the badness of the world and how they, too, will now be bad. Simple enough. But what follows is no straightforward excursion into the lives of two young women rebelling against the world but one filmmaker rebelling against the way meaning and story interlock. To describe the plot of this movie would not only be a futile exercise, as it would just be a relaying of separate actions, one after another, with no discernible story, but it would also greatly miss the point. There is a story to Daisies, it's just not in the movie. It is the movie. It's how the movie is made, where it starts and where and how it ends. Our two young adventurous women feast upon the world (both literally and figuratively as they consume copious amounts of food throughout the course of the film) and, in the end, find guilt and anxiety the reward for working against the state. After gorging themselves on more food than most people have ever seen in one room, they mash it, walk on it, throw it at each other and trample their surroundings until all lies in ruin. After a brief detour to a drowning death for their sins, they are resurrected and desperate to right their wrongs. Here's where Věra Chytilová turns Marie I and Marie II into perfect wards and representatives of the state. They exploit and use and waste and then, repeating the mantra of the brainwashed worker, that work makes one happy, they repair their damage but in such a haphazard and laughable way that it would be better to leave things as they were. And when it's all over, the decadence of the rich and powerful, in the form of a gaudy chandelier, crushes their very existence. Daisies is not a tepid undertaking, a mild statement or a half-hearted film student exercise. It is a bold and exciting journey into the mythos of the state, modern life and the story of film. The very state Chytilová lampooned banned the movie for its excess, specifically the wasting of food, and the Soviet invasion in 1968 essentially made her persona non grata until 1976. When an artist makes a statement that no one in power can understand, you can bet it's going to be banned, if only to keep the masses from projecting onto it their own interpretations and meaning. But Daisies isn't just some clever artistic damnation of the world, it's a celebration of cinema itself. Chytilová's visuals are simply stunning. Long before switching visual styles throughout a movie (color to black and white, smooth to grainy, etc) became popular in the eighties from the works of Oliver Stone to MTV videos, Daisies did so with ease. The film uses different styles, alternating time frames, redundant sets and surreal imagery (at one point, going up in dumb waiter, the two Maries look through the opening at each passing floor to see things like outdoor settings and symphony orchestras as they go by) to make the film into one of the grandest and purest cinematic creations to come out of not only the Czechoslovak New Wave, but the sixties period. Daisies is more than just a great movie. In many ways, Daisies is the movies. Director: Vera Chytilová Screenplay: Vera Chytilová (screenplay and story), Ester Krumbachová, Pavel Jurácek Original Music: Jirí Slitr, Jirí Sust Cinematography: Jaroslav Kucera Film Editing: Miroslav Hájek Production Design: Karel Lier Set Decoration: Frantisek Straka Costume Design: Ester Krumbachová Cast: Ivana Karbanová (Marie II), Jitka Cerhová (Marie I ), Marie Cesková, Jirina Myskova, Marcela Brezinová, Julius Albert (Man About Town) By Greg Ferrara SOURCES: Wikipedia IMDB

Pearls of the Czech New Wave - Six Films in a Collection from Eclipse


Eclipse's new DVD series Pearls of the Czech New Wave presents a choice selection of films made by some of the most courageous directors in film history. Seemingly innocuous and apolitical movies are among those denounced by the Czech Communists, whereas others take a more defiant stance against the restrictions imposed by official censorship. Between Michael Koresky's informative notes on this new Eclipse collection, and earlier writings by the late Amos Vogel, we begin to better understand the situation in 1960s Czechoslovakia.

When Alexander Dubček became the First Secretary and President, the liberalization of Czechoslovakia became official policy. Greater freedom in journalism and the arts culminated in the Prague Spring of 1968. The move toward more civil liberties was soon stopped when Soviet tanks entered Prague in August.

The state-run film school FAMU had long allowed students access to foreign films banned to the general public, and many Czech productions suppressed by the state domestically were still exported to festivals outside the country. The "New Wave" pictures most often found disfavor with the Communist censors not for opposing the government in any direct way, but because they deviated from the approved standards of Socialist Realism. The purpose of government-supported art (the only acceptable art in a totalitarian state) is to advance The Revolution, "to further the goals of socialism and communism". Thus a typical Socialist Realist film shows ordinary people discovering or acknowledging that their work and suffering contributes to the ultimate social good. A typical approved character gives his all for the benefit of his comrades, and then refuses to take a personal reward. Everything is for the group, not the individual; commitment to the ultimate victory of Communism heals all psychic wounds and makes personal issues secondary. Characters that act in self-interest are invariably avaricious and anti-social.

It goes without saying that the strictures of Socialist Realism don't leave much room for exploring the nuances of human behavior. The majority of the films gathered for Pearls of the Czech New Wave aren't overtly anti-Communist. Some revel in nonsense fantasy and visual excess, delighting in the sheer liberation of breaking the rules. Others simply allow characters to be people, without carrying the responsibility of promoting an abstract (and demonstrably inhuman) social ideology. Some of the films saw local distribution before being withdrawn from public view while others were banned almost on release and withheld for decades. After the short-lived triumph of the Prague Spring, certain of the New Wave filmmakers decided to leave the country. Others either stopped working or redirected themselves to projects condoned by the new and harsher regime.

The anthology film Pearls of the Deep (Perlicky na dne, 1966) sees five New Wave directors taking on short stories by the author Bohumil Hrabal. Each quirky chapter has a distinctive personality and none are the least interested in being socially responsible. Mr. Balthazar's Death is a bit of black comedy by Jiří Menzel, whose big hit in the West is Closely Watched Trains. Several fans of motorcycle racing entertain themselves at a rally with stories of old crashes, while waiting for new accidents. Jan Němec's The Impostors sees two old men in a hospice, a singer and a journalist, recall their earlier successes. Author Hrabal has a small part in each episode; here he delivers the surprise finish. The omnibus pops to color for Evald Schorm's odd comedy The House of Joy, which features the same primitive artist that served as the inspiration for author Hrabal's short story. An eccentric artist and his equally odd mother constantly decorate their roadside shack. They eventually erect a tin image of a crucified Christ that causes a traffic accident. The sole female director in the group is the provocative Věra Chytilová. Her The Restaurant The World is a perplexing, endlessly interpretable picture puzzle about a eatery closed on account of an odd death in the back room. A bride left alone on her wedding night is at a loss -- she doesn't want to sleep by herself, even if her new husband is in jail. Director Jaromil Jires' final chapter Romance covers the strange encounter of a young plumber's assistant with a teenaged gypsy girl, who at first wants cash but then decides that her conquest is the man of her dreams. A social angle comes in when she takes her new beau back to the gypsy camp.

The best-known title in the Eclipse set is Věra Chytilová's Daisies (Sedmikrásky, 1966), a nonsensical barrage of chaotic imagery clearly designed to outrage literal-minded viewers. Surreal, irrational, it defies any attempt at categorization. Two manic beauties romp about for the entire length of the picture, leaping from one brightly colored setting to the next. Some passages suggest a hint of reality, only to be undercut by unpredictable jumps to new absurdities. Like a moving collage, the girls' costumes change as often as the backgrounds, as they overdose on sensations and pleasures. Food fights figure significantly, as do alarming references to blades and cutting. At one point the irresponsible women are plastered with newspapers, like newsprint mummies. In another sequence rudimentary camera effects make them appear to disassemble their bodies.

Film historian and theoretician Amos Vogel reported that Jan Němec's A Report on the Party and Guests (O slavnosti a hostech, 1966) won a Critic's Prize while simultaneously earning the special censorship status of being "banned forever". A sinister piece of Kafkaesque menace, the story concerns several picnicking couples preparing to join a party in the country. Confronted by a larger number of well-dressed men, they are forcibly herded into a clearing and made to withstand a bafflingly unclear, humiliating treatment by an inquisitor. The wealthy party-giver then appears, berates the inquisitor and invites the newcomers to join his celebration tables by a pond -- where his attitude becomes no less intimidating. When one guest disappears without warning, the host laughs it off. But the inquisitor is soon organizing a "friendly" expedition to bring the absent guest back -- with dogs and guns. A witheringly apt allegory for the Czech regime, Report frightens because it depicts how easily a comfortable class will cooperate and collaborate with openly hostile self-elected authorities. The cast is composed of professional artists. Composer Jan Klusák plays the offensive inquisitor, and directors Jan Němec and Evald Schorm take major roles. Němec earned the personal attention of Dubček's predecessor, when he was named the "greatest danger to the establishment."

Evald Schorm's Return of the Prodigal Son (Návrat ztraceného syna, 1967) charts the therapeutic non-progress of an architect, happily married and with a small child, who attempts suicide. He grows distant from his wife to the point that she takes a lover. He cooperates fully with his doctor but also goes AWOL from the clinic, as if trying to meet new people and start a new life. An added complication is the doctor's frustrated wife, who would like to have an affair with him. Roaming out on his own, frightened locals mistake him for a wanted murderer. Our hero seems depressed by the state of his life -- even his employer talks vaguely about the necessity of making compromises. Director Schorm is frequently compared to Italy's Michelangelo Antonioni; Prodigal Son begins and ends with 'architectural' montages of buildings, similar to Antonioni's The Eclipse.

Jiří Menzel's Capricious Summer (Rozmarné léto, 1968) is from a book by an honored Communist martyr executed with hundreds of other hostages in the wake of the assassination of the Nazi Hangman, Heydrich. Yet Menzel's insistence on embracing the personal over the communal goes against official policy. Like the director's international hit Closely Watched Trains, Capricious Summer sets its story at a safe distance in the past, the relatively peaceful 1920s. Three amusing middle-aged men, one of them a minister, pass a summer swimming at a bath house on the river. Excitement comes into their lives with the arrival of a traveling magician, whose beautiful assistant takes up with each of them in turn. Filmed in warm colors, the show is a relaxed pastoral idyll. Essayist Michael Koresky situates Menzel as the least provocative of the New Wave directors, an artist who changed with the times rather than engage in a losing battle with the authorities.

That would not describe director Jaromil Jires, whose virulently non-allegorical critique of the Communist regime The Joke (Žert, 1969) wasn't completed until after the Soviets had retaken direct control of Czechoslovakia. Jires may have pulled out all the stops with The Joke thinking it might be his last chance to direct any movie. Yet his next picture would be the frequently screened Valerie and Her Week of Wonders.

The Joke is based on a novel by the Czech dissident Milan Kundera, the author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Brilliantly told through a series of illuminating flashbacks, it tells the story of Ludvik, a Czech student in 1950 who kids his girlfriend Helena, a fervent Communist, in a written joke. The joke makes a flippant reference to Trotsky. Helena informs on Ludvik and his closest friends convene a meeting to expel him from both the party and the university. Ludvik then spends six years in an army unit that serves as a hellish forced labor camp for undesirables. Years later, he returns home for a reunion with Helena, his mind set on revenge. Ludvik meets other past associates that have disassociated themselves from their deeds; they're different people now. Yet none has spent a lifetime victimized by an inhuman, absurd society, and none acknowledge their responsibility. What is Ludvik to do with his inner rage?

In Eastern-bloc productions from the Cold War era we expect heavy criticism of civil rights abuses in the West, and a false optimism about living conditions in totalitarian states like East Germany. The Joke presents content and situations unthinkable under Communist rule. Innocent Czech citizens are abused in a state concentration camp, and student "idealists" are seen as a mob that destroys colleagues that fail to conform to their sacred ideology. Fifteen years later, Helena gets off a bus and asks why a fountain with statues of saints hasn't been replaced with something more inspirational and less "mystical". She's been converted into a new kind of privileged bourgeois. Paying her back for her betrayal has been Ludvik's goal for years -- why is the act not satisfying?

Eclipse's Series #32 DVD disc set of Pearls of the Czech New Wave presents the six features in presentations that range from excellent to passable. Only Return of the Prodigal Son has a lackluster surface. Daisies and Capricious Summer display excellent color. Each of the plain-wrap discs has removable English subtitles. Making the set a coherent experience for novice viewers are excellent liner notes by Michael Koresky, aided by Irena Kovarova. The Czech filmmakers' difficulties bear comparison with American writers and directors who were blacklisted, driven into exile and in a few cases imprisoned over ideological differences in the Cold War.

Reference: Film as a Subversive Art, Amos Vogel. Random House New York 1974


For more information about Pearls of the Czech New Wave, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Pearls of the Czech New Wave, go to TCM Shopping.

by Glenn Erickson

Pearls of the Czech New Wave - Six Films in a Collection from Eclipse

Eclipse's new DVD series Pearls of the Czech New Wave presents a choice selection of films made by some of the most courageous directors in film history. Seemingly innocuous and apolitical movies are among those denounced by the Czech Communists, whereas others take a more defiant stance against the restrictions imposed by official censorship. Between Michael Koresky's informative notes on this new Eclipse collection, and earlier writings by the late Amos Vogel, we begin to better understand the situation in 1960s Czechoslovakia. When Alexander Dubček became the First Secretary and President, the liberalization of Czechoslovakia became official policy. Greater freedom in journalism and the arts culminated in the Prague Spring of 1968. The move toward more civil liberties was soon stopped when Soviet tanks entered Prague in August. The state-run film school FAMU had long allowed students access to foreign films banned to the general public, and many Czech productions suppressed by the state domestically were still exported to festivals outside the country. The "New Wave" pictures most often found disfavor with the Communist censors not for opposing the government in any direct way, but because they deviated from the approved standards of Socialist Realism. The purpose of government-supported art (the only acceptable art in a totalitarian state) is to advance The Revolution, "to further the goals of socialism and communism". Thus a typical Socialist Realist film shows ordinary people discovering or acknowledging that their work and suffering contributes to the ultimate social good. A typical approved character gives his all for the benefit of his comrades, and then refuses to take a personal reward. Everything is for the group, not the individual; commitment to the ultimate victory of Communism heals all psychic wounds and makes personal issues secondary. Characters that act in self-interest are invariably avaricious and anti-social. It goes without saying that the strictures of Socialist Realism don't leave much room for exploring the nuances of human behavior. The majority of the films gathered for Pearls of the Czech New Wave aren't overtly anti-Communist. Some revel in nonsense fantasy and visual excess, delighting in the sheer liberation of breaking the rules. Others simply allow characters to be people, without carrying the responsibility of promoting an abstract (and demonstrably inhuman) social ideology. Some of the films saw local distribution before being withdrawn from public view while others were banned almost on release and withheld for decades. After the short-lived triumph of the Prague Spring, certain of the New Wave filmmakers decided to leave the country. Others either stopped working or redirected themselves to projects condoned by the new and harsher regime. The anthology film Pearls of the Deep (Perlicky na dne, 1966) sees five New Wave directors taking on short stories by the author Bohumil Hrabal. Each quirky chapter has a distinctive personality and none are the least interested in being socially responsible. Mr. Balthazar's Death is a bit of black comedy by Jiří Menzel, whose big hit in the West is Closely Watched Trains. Several fans of motorcycle racing entertain themselves at a rally with stories of old crashes, while waiting for new accidents. Jan Němec's The Impostors sees two old men in a hospice, a singer and a journalist, recall their earlier successes. Author Hrabal has a small part in each episode; here he delivers the surprise finish. The omnibus pops to color for Evald Schorm's odd comedy The House of Joy, which features the same primitive artist that served as the inspiration for author Hrabal's short story. An eccentric artist and his equally odd mother constantly decorate their roadside shack. They eventually erect a tin image of a crucified Christ that causes a traffic accident. The sole female director in the group is the provocative Věra Chytilová. Her The Restaurant The World is a perplexing, endlessly interpretable picture puzzle about a eatery closed on account of an odd death in the back room. A bride left alone on her wedding night is at a loss -- she doesn't want to sleep by herself, even if her new husband is in jail. Director Jaromil Jires' final chapter Romance covers the strange encounter of a young plumber's assistant with a teenaged gypsy girl, who at first wants cash but then decides that her conquest is the man of her dreams. A social angle comes in when she takes her new beau back to the gypsy camp. The best-known title in the Eclipse set is Věra Chytilová's Daisies (Sedmikrásky, 1966), a nonsensical barrage of chaotic imagery clearly designed to outrage literal-minded viewers. Surreal, irrational, it defies any attempt at categorization. Two manic beauties romp about for the entire length of the picture, leaping from one brightly colored setting to the next. Some passages suggest a hint of reality, only to be undercut by unpredictable jumps to new absurdities. Like a moving collage, the girls' costumes change as often as the backgrounds, as they overdose on sensations and pleasures. Food fights figure significantly, as do alarming references to blades and cutting. At one point the irresponsible women are plastered with newspapers, like newsprint mummies. In another sequence rudimentary camera effects make them appear to disassemble their bodies. Film historian and theoretician Amos Vogel reported that Jan Němec's A Report on the Party and Guests (O slavnosti a hostech, 1966) won a Critic's Prize while simultaneously earning the special censorship status of being "banned forever". A sinister piece of Kafkaesque menace, the story concerns several picnicking couples preparing to join a party in the country. Confronted by a larger number of well-dressed men, they are forcibly herded into a clearing and made to withstand a bafflingly unclear, humiliating treatment by an inquisitor. The wealthy party-giver then appears, berates the inquisitor and invites the newcomers to join his celebration tables by a pond -- where his attitude becomes no less intimidating. When one guest disappears without warning, the host laughs it off. But the inquisitor is soon organizing a "friendly" expedition to bring the absent guest back -- with dogs and guns. A witheringly apt allegory for the Czech regime, Report frightens because it depicts how easily a comfortable class will cooperate and collaborate with openly hostile self-elected authorities. The cast is composed of professional artists. Composer Jan Klusák plays the offensive inquisitor, and directors Jan Němec and Evald Schorm take major roles. Němec earned the personal attention of Dubček's predecessor, when he was named the "greatest danger to the establishment." Evald Schorm's Return of the Prodigal Son (Návrat ztraceného syna, 1967) charts the therapeutic non-progress of an architect, happily married and with a small child, who attempts suicide. He grows distant from his wife to the point that she takes a lover. He cooperates fully with his doctor but also goes AWOL from the clinic, as if trying to meet new people and start a new life. An added complication is the doctor's frustrated wife, who would like to have an affair with him. Roaming out on his own, frightened locals mistake him for a wanted murderer. Our hero seems depressed by the state of his life -- even his employer talks vaguely about the necessity of making compromises. Director Schorm is frequently compared to Italy's Michelangelo Antonioni; Prodigal Son begins and ends with 'architectural' montages of buildings, similar to Antonioni's The Eclipse. Jiří Menzel's Capricious Summer (Rozmarné léto, 1968) is from a book by an honored Communist martyr executed with hundreds of other hostages in the wake of the assassination of the Nazi Hangman, Heydrich. Yet Menzel's insistence on embracing the personal over the communal goes against official policy. Like the director's international hit Closely Watched Trains, Capricious Summer sets its story at a safe distance in the past, the relatively peaceful 1920s. Three amusing middle-aged men, one of them a minister, pass a summer swimming at a bath house on the river. Excitement comes into their lives with the arrival of a traveling magician, whose beautiful assistant takes up with each of them in turn. Filmed in warm colors, the show is a relaxed pastoral idyll. Essayist Michael Koresky situates Menzel as the least provocative of the New Wave directors, an artist who changed with the times rather than engage in a losing battle with the authorities. That would not describe director Jaromil Jires, whose virulently non-allegorical critique of the Communist regime The Joke (Žert, 1969) wasn't completed until after the Soviets had retaken direct control of Czechoslovakia. Jires may have pulled out all the stops with The Joke thinking it might be his last chance to direct any movie. Yet his next picture would be the frequently screened Valerie and Her Week of Wonders. The Joke is based on a novel by the Czech dissident Milan Kundera, the author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Brilliantly told through a series of illuminating flashbacks, it tells the story of Ludvik, a Czech student in 1950 who kids his girlfriend Helena, a fervent Communist, in a written joke. The joke makes a flippant reference to Trotsky. Helena informs on Ludvik and his closest friends convene a meeting to expel him from both the party and the university. Ludvik then spends six years in an army unit that serves as a hellish forced labor camp for undesirables. Years later, he returns home for a reunion with Helena, his mind set on revenge. Ludvik meets other past associates that have disassociated themselves from their deeds; they're different people now. Yet none has spent a lifetime victimized by an inhuman, absurd society, and none acknowledge their responsibility. What is Ludvik to do with his inner rage? In Eastern-bloc productions from the Cold War era we expect heavy criticism of civil rights abuses in the West, and a false optimism about living conditions in totalitarian states like East Germany. The Joke presents content and situations unthinkable under Communist rule. Innocent Czech citizens are abused in a state concentration camp, and student "idealists" are seen as a mob that destroys colleagues that fail to conform to their sacred ideology. Fifteen years later, Helena gets off a bus and asks why a fountain with statues of saints hasn't been replaced with something more inspirational and less "mystical". She's been converted into a new kind of privileged bourgeois. Paying her back for her betrayal has been Ludvik's goal for years -- why is the act not satisfying? Eclipse's Series #32 DVD disc set of Pearls of the Czech New Wave presents the six features in presentations that range from excellent to passable. Only Return of the Prodigal Son has a lackluster surface. Daisies and Capricious Summer display excellent color. Each of the plain-wrap discs has removable English subtitles. Making the set a coherent experience for novice viewers are excellent liner notes by Michael Koresky, aided by Irena Kovarova. The Czech filmmakers' difficulties bear comparison with American writers and directors who were blacklisted, driven into exile and in a few cases imprisoned over ideological differences in the Cold War. Reference: Film as a Subversive Art, Amos Vogel. Random House New York 1974 For more information about Pearls of the Czech New Wave, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Pearls of the Czech New Wave, go to TCM Shopping. by Glenn Erickson

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Produced in Czechoslovakia in 1966 as Sedmikrásky; running time: 76-78 min.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1967

Released in United States 1996

Released in United States June 1991

Released in United States September 1, 1990

Shown at 11th London Film Festival 1967.

Shown at Bergamo Festival 1967.

Shown at New York International Festival of Lesbian and Gay Film June 7-23, 1991.

Shown at Pacific Film Archive (The Banned and the Beautiful) September 1, 1990.

Shown at Telluride Film Festival August 30 - September 2, 1996.

This film was banned in Czechoslovakia.

Released in United States 1967 (Shown at 11th London Film Festival 1967.)

Released in United States September 1, 1990 (Shown at Pacific Film Archive (The Banned and the Beautiful) September 1, 1990.)

Released in United States June 1991 (Shown at New York International Festival of Lesbian and Gay Film June 7-23, 1991.)

Released in United States 1967 (Shown at Bergamo Festival 1967.)

Released in United States 1996 (Shown at Telluride Film Festival August 30 - September 2, 1996.)