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Czech Feature Film since 1989: The Context:

After the fall of communism. ? Czech film industry denationalised? First, "primitive" commercial films made? Later, more artistically ambitious projects? Banned film-makers from the 1960s did not gain prominence again in the 1990s? New generation of thirty-year-olds? Some 280 features made in

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Czech Feature Film since 1989: The Context:

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    1. Czech Feature Film since 1989: The Context: ¦ The 1960s: "Czech New Wave" ¦ Post-1968 Russian invasion clampdown: purge of filmmakers: ¦ 1970-1989: propaganda, escapism, films for children

    2. After the fall of communism ¦ Czech film industry denationalised ¦ First, "primitive" commercial films made ¦ Later, more artistically ambitious projects ¦ Banned film-makers from the 1960s did not gain prominence again in the 1990s ¦ New generation of thirty-year-olds ¦ Some 280 features made in 1989-2007 ¦ Maybe 40 will survive as works of art ¦ Dvorák: "Czech cinema is manipulative".

    3. Contemporary Czech Cinema ¦ Useful to study it as material culture ¦ Czech film transmits a unified value system ¦ Is this a mythology or does it reflect reality? ¦ What do the sociologists say?

    4. What is contemporary Czech society like? Sociologists: ¦ No fair principles of remuneration yet ¦ Low salaries for highly educated professionals in the state sector ¦ Subjective euforic feeling after fall of communism not matched by reality ¦ No substantial middle class yet ¦ Czech society as a plebeian community

    5. What the Czechs believe Sociologists: ¦ Large personal wealth is the result of theft ¦ Rich people are criminals ¦ If you are poor, it is entirely your own fault ¦ Defensive and wary vis-a-vis "the other"

    6. What the Czechs believe Sociologists: ¦ Czechs are most happy within the privacy of their families ¦ Like under communism, they still regard the public sphere as hostile ¦ State services are unreliable and hostile ¦ Politicians are fraudulent ¦ The state of the economy is "dire"

    7. What the Czechs are like ¦ Educational level of Czech women is similar to that in Scandinavia ¦ Social and economic position of Czech women: subjugation ¦ Most Czechs have secondary education ¦ There is little research and development ¦ There is alienation at work ¦ Czechs identify themselves with their local village, town, the countryside (=place of healing, refuge before "otherness")

    8. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Early post 1990 films exorcised the trauma of communism ¦ Antonín Máša´s Was this really us? (1990) highlights alienation which became the norm after 1990

    9. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Traumatic periods from history ¦ Petr Hvižds The Order (1994): helpless position of individual under totalitarian pressure; hero forced to do what he hates

    10. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Karel Kachyna, The Last Butterfly (1990): ¦ Central European belief that art will prevail over oppression

    11. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Children as hope for the future ¦ (A Kingdom for a Guitar, made 1989, released 1990): ¦ Metaphor of openness, freedom and inquisitiveness ¦ "I don´t want influential friends, I want good friends."

    12. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Jan Švankmajer´s Little Otík (2000): ¦ Warning against human attempts "to change what has been fixed by natural forces"

    13. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Jan Švankmajer´s The Mad (2005), based on Marquis de Sade: ¦ "Democracy is a lunatic asylum, but return to dictatorship would be worse"

    14. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Early, optimistic commercial comedies: ¦ The Sun, Hay, Sex (1991): ¦ "Everybody will become rich."

    15. Czech Cinema: The Themes ¦ Jan Kraus, The Little Town (2003) ¦ The benefits of the fall of communism: young girls are forced to dance on tables before old men in the local pub

    16. Czech Cinema: The Themes Destitution: ¦ Bohdan Sláma´s The Wild Bees (2001) ¦ Nothing will ever change ¦ "Work, women, this is capitalism, for fuck´s sake!"

    17. Relations between men and women ¦ Czech film: Statements in defence of subjugated women ¦ Weak, aggressive males ¦ Jan Hrebejk´s Cosy Dens (1999)

    18. Relations between men and women ¦ Man the fantasist, chcípák, the intellectual vagrant-outsider Tomáš Vorel´s The Stone Bridge (1996)

    19. Relations between men and women ¦ Czech men are unnecessarily violent ¦ Men look for sex, not a relationship ¦ Young attractive women strike relationships with men who are decades older

    20. Kamenák: (A Really Cruel Joke) Vulgar popular comedy Highly successful Three parts (Kamenák 1, 2, 3, 2003 – 2005) Verbal humour, ostranenie, puns

    21. Kamenák Deeply familiar small town environment Cosy atmosphere: everyone knows everyone

    22. Kamenák Family life Archetypal “Everyman” - police chief Josef Novák, wife, son Joey

    23. Kamenák The logic of the narrative sacrificed to verbal gags Insulting old people Insulting women

    24. Kamenák Wife rushes about at breakfast, husband reads newspaper School is a place of torment – children bring home only bad marks Corporal punishment at home

    25. Kamenák: Town environment: Home School Hospital Fake monastery Castle

    26. Kamenák: The police (i.e. official authorities) are ineffectual The politicians are corrupt Serior criminals go unpunished, only minor criminals are caught Business consortium is made up of crooks Business is always corrupt No morals: the opening of a brothel is highly celebrated

    27. Kamenák: Men and Women Young women seen only as sex objects Older women are subject of ridicule/source of horror Men are feeble: In youth, they chase skirts, in old age are interested in football, beer

    28. Kamenák: Men and Women Men don´t understand the female psychology Men of all ages are obsessed with the young female body Everything must be on man´s terms: There are no ideal men Gender stereotypes rule

    29. Kamenák: The Czechs and the Romanies The Romanies seen as an alien element in Czech society The close-knit Czech community “doesn’t need” foreign influences: “Italian chianti is sour” Presence of guns in Czech society Racist stereotypes of the Romanies Czech self-irony

    30. Kamenák´s success leads to preaching Low quality of Czech newspapers: “You don’t like Klaus, you don’t like the United States, you don’t like naked girls, you don’t like murders. I just don’t know why we take that paper.”

    31. Kamenák: Values Schadenfreude What leads to success is the correct thing to do – regardless of morals “Would it not be better to bribe the Romanies? It is more honest and, after all, these days, it is fashionable.”

    32. Which are the best films? Jan Švankmajer: Lekce Faust (The Faust Lesson, 1994) Otesánek (Little Otík, 2000) Šílení (The Mad, 2005)

    33. Which are the best films? Karel Kachyna: Poslední motýl (The Last Butterfly, 1990)

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