NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
1,7 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe friends enjoy the charms of nature - and of their guests.The friends enjoy the charms of nature - and of their guests.The friends enjoy the charms of nature - and of their guests.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires au total
Jana Preissová
- Anna
- (as Jana Drchalová)
Vlasta Jelínková
- Sluzebna
- (as V. Jelínková)
Alois Vachek
- Muz v hospode
- (as A. Vachek)
Bohumil Koska
- Muz v hospode
- (as B. Koska)
Karel Hovorka
- Muz v hospode
- (as K. Hovorka)
Antonin Prazak
- Policajt
- (as A. Prazák)
Pavel Bosek
- Mayor
- (as P. Bosek)
Karel Engel
- Vyrostek
- (non crédité)
Jaroslav Tomsa
- Vyrostek
- (non crédité)
Ludvík Volf
- Vyrostek
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Most of the Czech films I've seen follow a familiar pattern: a history lesson revolving around war or occupation, along with lots of bohemian irony and iconic images, usually of Prague. This one's different. I enjoyed Kolya, and Menzel's other films (Closely Watched Trains and I Served the King of England), but I prefer this one for leaving out the pathos.
The irony would come through more clearly if I spoke any Czech beyond "dobre den", but this film still has plenty. A tattered little town with unpaved streets, drenched by miserable summer rain the whole way through. A visit by a fleabag circus supplies a limited amount of merriment - about what the little town deserves. About all they've come to expect, too, in their sodden little corner of Bohemia.
I wouldn't have watched this film at all if I hadn't already "read" the book. Josef Capek's witty illustrations for the novel led me to a movie which is every bit as good, and which fills in the details I couldn't read between the pictures.
The irony would come through more clearly if I spoke any Czech beyond "dobre den", but this film still has plenty. A tattered little town with unpaved streets, drenched by miserable summer rain the whole way through. A visit by a fleabag circus supplies a limited amount of merriment - about what the little town deserves. About all they've come to expect, too, in their sodden little corner of Bohemia.
I wouldn't have watched this film at all if I hadn't already "read" the book. Josef Capek's witty illustrations for the novel led me to a movie which is every bit as good, and which fills in the details I couldn't read between the pictures.
A sleepy spa village is excited when visited by a circus acrobat and his beautiful assistant.
Oddly amusing little comedy whose main virtue is its inimitable period setting and somewhat chekhovian atmosphere; though the wayward eccentricity of its characters is also something to experience.
Oddly amusing little comedy whose main virtue is its inimitable period setting and somewhat chekhovian atmosphere; though the wayward eccentricity of its characters is also something to experience.
Pretty good-looking, very good music, erotic, relaxed, and poetic and philosophic in a pretty similar way to Godard's films from the 90ies. Unfortunately, people who do not speak Czech will probably miss many points of the dialogue.
8 out of 10.
8 out of 10.
This is a Czech film made behind the Iron Curtain. Granted, Czechs were among the most liberal of the Easter Bloc occupied nations, but this will still be conservative, albeit a charming form of conservative. There's nothing edgy here, unless you're a soviet censor.
As Commie flix tend to do, this is talky. Very talky. But not in a bad way. But when foreign films talk a lot, that means we will read a lot of subtitles. Unlike the more familiar rhythms of german, french or dutch films, Commie flix tend to talk a lot about intellectual subjects, despite doing it in laymen's conversational styles. If you're in a philosophical mood, and you want to glue your eyeballs to the screen, then this may be for you.
As Commie flix tend to do, this is talky. Very talky. But not in a bad way. But when foreign films talk a lot, that means we will read a lot of subtitles. Unlike the more familiar rhythms of german, french or dutch films, Commie flix tend to talk a lot about intellectual subjects, despite doing it in laymen's conversational styles. If you're in a philosophical mood, and you want to glue your eyeballs to the screen, then this may be for you.
As the previous reviewers have noted this second film from Czech New Wave director Jiri Menzel has loveliness, charm, whimsicality, gentleness, wistfulness, lightness, airiness, poignancy and, of course, capriciousness. What it most sedulously does not have are laughs, at least in great profusion or even, for that matter, many chuckles or upturned corners of the mouth. And as this film is intended to be a comedy that is a significantly painful omission. Give it a C, mostly for the director's ability to channel the atmosphere of a provincial town in Czechoslovakia in lazy, slumbrous summer. And the gals are definitely on the sexy side.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJirí Menzel's first feature in color.
- GaffesIn the second and third shots of Ernie doing the tightrope walk for the first time, the four cards are in different positions, the third shot they more equidistant from each other than they are in the second shot.
- Citations
[first lines]
[English subtitled version]
Antonín Dura: The course of this summer seems somewhat unfortunate.
- ConnexionsEdited into Ten Minutes Older: The Cello (2002)
- Bandes originalesJak je krásné kouzlit ohne na svete
Sung by Waldemar Matuska
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
Détails
- Durée1 heure 14 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant
Lacune principale
By what name was Un été capricieux (1968) officially released in India in English?
Répondre