O slavnosti a hostech
- 1966
- 1h 11min
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA small group of bourgeois guests head for a birthday party of a prominent figure. As they go through the woods and have a picnic, they are suddenly surrounded by a bunch of suspicious stran... Leer todoA small group of bourgeois guests head for a birthday party of a prominent figure. As they go through the woods and have a picnic, they are suddenly surrounded by a bunch of suspicious strangers.A small group of bourgeois guests head for a birthday party of a prominent figure. As they go through the woods and have a picnic, they are suddenly surrounded by a bunch of suspicious strangers.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Eva
- (as Zdena Skvorecká)
- Manzel
- (as Ewald Schorm)
- Josef
- (as Jirí Nemec)
- nevesta Olinka
- (as Dana Nemcová)
- Zenich
- (as Milon Novotný)
- Antonín
- (as Antonín Prazák)
- Knecht
- (as J. Elis)
- Knecht
- (as J. Hrbek)
- Knecht
- (as O. Lepsík)
- Knecht
- (as Z. Mosnicka)
Opiniones destacadas
The story follows a group of seven middle-class men and women having a picnic near a lake. There is a discussion about an obscure future event. At one point, they see what appears to be a wedding party dance by at a distance. They finally decide to proceed to get to the "celebration" in time.
Suddenly, the group is accosted by a significant number of men. The men are led by Rudolf (Jan Klusak). It's not clear if they are threatening or joking. Karel (Karel Mares) defies Rudolf at one point and is roughed up. Josef (Jirí Nemec) from the picnic group helps to bring peace. Then an older man in white appears. Known as The Host (Ivan Vyskocil), he welcomes everyone to his joint birthday party and wedding celebration. He reprimands Rudolph and seems to smooth everything over.
During the meal, the Host learns his guests occupy the wrong seats and that one of the men from the picnic has left. This causes great consternation, and the Host and Rudolf decide to go and find the missing man and return him to the party. They use a large dog with massive teeth to aid in the search.
The aura of threat over a façade of peace apparently offended the Czech government of the time. This is not usually my type of film, but I thought it effectively communicated its point. It was banned in 1967 because it had "nothing in common with our republic, socialism, and the ideals of Communism."
An idyllic party turns into a prison camp, but the guests don't seem to notice that at all. It was a film about the world we used to live in. We were invited to a similar party and tried to pretend with keeping a smile on our faces. And the cinema was able to film that "escape towards freedom".
Jan Nemec was one of the biggest individuals of the young Czechoslovakian cinema of the 60's. It was already at college were he had trouble with censorship. It stated that he was picking the wrong subjects and that he reached out for wrong authors (Hlasko, Dostojevski). He was also accused of their wrongful interpretation.
The "plot" revolves around a group of friends who are having a picnic in the park one afternoon, but are eventually forced into going to a birthday celebration for a man they do not know. In order to gain his favor, some of the group betray a friend who left the party. The plot is actually loosely structured after the manner that Czechoslovakia was taken over by the Communists in the 50's, and the way the Czechs allowed it to happen. Interestingly for a film that was "banned forever" by the Communists, I found it to be more scathing in its depiction of the people who were seduced into the situation, and then collaborated with the party overseeres.
In a film with a surrealist plot, the acting is surprisingly realistic. The situation is so bizarre, but the film poses the question: if you were there would you have acted any different? The situation, after all, was very bizarre in real life too. The acting is excellent, the cinemetography is excellent, and Jan Nemec (whose Holocaust film 'Diamonds of the Night' I found to be disappointing) directs with a bold hand. This is a great film, and it's not just a history lesson. There's humor in it too, and it's very interesting from a psychological perspective. 10/10
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn this film there are no professional actors, but different personalities from the artistic circle of Prague. Ivan Vyskocil is a real-life theater director, Zdena Skvorecka and Josef Skvorecký are writers, Jan Klusák and Karel Mares are composers, Jiri Nemec was a philosopher and translator, his wife Dana Nemcova is a psychologist, Pavel Bosek is a theater author, Evald Schorm is a film director, Milon Novotny is a photographer, etc. Their friends play the other roles.
- Citas
Hostitel: Boys, Boys! Now, Now, Now. We know Rudolf's a naughty boy, but Karel?
Eva: You should have seen him sulking, being naughty!
Frantisek: Because he's an old rebel.
Karel: No, I'm a Democrat.
Hostitel: So am I.
Wife: So am I.
Eva: So am I.
Marta: So am I.
Frantisek: So am I.
Josef: With your permission, so am I.
- ConexionesEdited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- A Report on the Party and Guests
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 11 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1