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IMDbPro

Ho servito il re d'Inghilterra

Titolo originale: Obsluhoval jsem anglického krále
  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 53min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
8416
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ivan Barnev in Ho servito il re d'Inghilterra (2006)
This is the theatrical trailer for I Served the King of England, directed by Jirí Menzel.
Riproduci trailer2: 03
1 video
21 foto
CommediaDrammaGuerraRomanticismoSatira

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA look at the glamorous life at an old-world Prague hotel.A look at the glamorous life at an old-world Prague hotel.A look at the glamorous life at an old-world Prague hotel.

  • Regia
    • Jirí Menzel
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Bohumil Hrabal
    • Jirí Menzel
  • Star
    • Ivan Barnev
    • Oldrich Kaiser
    • Julia Jentsch
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,3/10
    8416
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jirí Menzel
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Bohumil Hrabal
      • Jirí Menzel
    • Star
      • Ivan Barnev
      • Oldrich Kaiser
      • Julia Jentsch
    • 33Recensioni degli utenti
    • 89Recensioni della critica
    • 72Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 12 vittorie e 13 candidature totali

    Video1

    I Served the King of England: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:03
    I Served the King of England: Theatrical Trailer

    Foto20

    Visualizza poster
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    + 14
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    Interpreti principali86

    Modifica
    Ivan Barnev
    Ivan Barnev
    • young Jan Díte
    Oldrich Kaiser
    Oldrich Kaiser
    • old Jan Díte
    Julia Jentsch
    Julia Jentsch
    • Líza
    Marián Labuda
    Marián Labuda
    • Walden
    Milan Lasica
    Milan Lasica
    • Profesor
    Zuzana Fialová
    Zuzana Fialová
    • Marcela
    Martin Huba
    Martin Huba
    • Skrivánek
    Josef Abrhám
    Josef Abrhám
    • Hotelier Brandejs
    Jirí Lábus
    Jirí Lábus
    • séf hotelu U Zlatého mesta Prahy
    Rudolf Hrusínský
    Rudolf Hrusínský
    • Tichota
    Pavel Nový
    Pavel Nový
    • Generál
    Jaromír Dulava
    Jaromír Dulava
    • waiter Karel
    Petra Hrebícková
    Petra Hrebícková
    • Jaruska
    Eva Kalcovská
    • Wanda
    Sárka Petruzelová
    • Julinka
    Tonya Graves
    Tonya Graves
    • Císar
    Jirí Sesták
    • Císník
    Jan Kusak
    • Milionár
    • Regia
      • Jirí Menzel
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Bohumil Hrabal
      • Jirí Menzel
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti33

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9philipdavies

    The more inglorious struggles of the insignificant and friendless to survive deserves our respect, not an easy and priggish contempt.

    Menzel, faithful to Hrabal, shows the Fall of Czech Man - and Sudeten German Woman - and their expulsion from their respective Middle-European idylls: They tragically fall into each other's arms just as global issue is joined that soon disillusions our Romeo and destroys his (now unfortunately rampantly Nazi) Juliet.

    Neither the quiet life of getting rich and enjoying all the pleasures money can bring, nor the stirring Wagnerian strains of Germanic supremacist idealism, can survive, but our opportunistic anti-hero, Ditie (a name which can translate as 'little man') is more adaptable, because his ideals are more pliant to the accidents of fate than his German wife's rigid Hitlerite fanaticism, and consequently he is eventually able to emerge from a sort of Communist Purgatory with a keen appreciation of life's real and much simpler necessities.

    With profound irony, it is in a smashed and ethnically cleansed Sudeten German village that an older and a wiser Ditie's rehabilitation is completed. And it is from this sobering perspective that he can finally both regret the excesses and errors of his life, and yet also take nostalgic pleasure from what was, after all, the wonderful, glittering, profoundly human spectacle of folly and grandeur which his life has been! Far from tragic or depressing, therefore, this film of the 20th century debacle of a nation ruined remarkably concludes with a very Czech endorsement of the simple, inoffensive pleasure in life which will always console this patient people at the troubled heart of darkest Europe: Ditie allows himself to enjoy a tankard of Pilsener beer - and Menzel's camera seems to gild the moment with as much gloriously sensuous golden dreaminess and spiritual fulfillment as ever bloated millionaire or romantically excessive idealist knew.

    At last, the little man has found his fulfillment where it always lay: in the little things. At last, old, disillusioned and unseduced any longer by the world's headier attractions, Ditie finds himself at home and happy.

    Here, the film seems to be saying, is the real idyll to which the Czech person should retire for refreshment of the soul, and not those false - though fabulous - ones we have been forced to discard.

    Just as Ditie observes that his own career of accidents always turned out well, so in this perspective the Czech experience seems, on the whole, to have turned out for the best. This optimistic fatalism seems typical of the Czech way of seeing things, and is as characteristic of this film of Menzel's old age as it was of his early masterpiece, 'Closely observed trains.' On this view, it would be churlish to condemn the film for self-indulgence, as many Western critics have done. Frankly, they haven't suffered so much, so what do they know of ethical conundrums and the moral paradoxes of survival? This meditation on the more inglorious struggles of the insignificant and friendless to survive deserves our respect, not an easy and priggish contempt. This must especially be true in the country which lies behind the heavily loaded title 'I served the King of England,' for this heavy hint must surely prick that particular national conscience with its role in one of history's most blatant acts of betrayal. The title practically dares any English commentator to judge Ditie in his historical predicament!

    (There is also considerable satisfaction to be had by the viewer from the sheer technical finesse of the film's production, on every level. Jiri Menzel's craft is also hugely impressive in scene after scene, which are turned with complete mastery of tragi-comic effect. But this is a study for another occasion.)
    7Chris_Docker

    One cannot help but admire it. Even if it doesn't quite reach the dizzying heights to which it aspires.

    Maybe, like me, you don't know that much about the history of the country wherein sits Prague, and its remnants of regal splendour. After watching I Served the King of England, you will know more. A lot more. The politics. The humour. The cultures. The aspirations. The troubled relations with neighbouring empires. And the incredible resilience of its individuals.

    I Served the King of England is very ambitious. It condenses an epic novel into two hours and squeezes in more styles than a catwalk. There are nods to the wit of Charlie Chaplin. The visual eulogies of Peter Greenaway. Penitentiaries, bars, brothels, woods, invading armies. All are collected in a dizzying montage as Jan Díte reviews the highs and lows of his life and loves in flashback.

    He has just been released from Prague Correctional Facility, having served almost 15 years. He is also in rather humble circumstances. This seems to contrast with his lifelong and apparently successful ambition to become a millionaire. The first half of the film has a theatrical feel of unreality – much like a musical. Serving lad Díte manages to score with a local beauty at the nearby bordello. He then get various jobs that involve him working with sophisticated women of pleasure, or in top hotels, or sometimes both together. His short stature enables him to play many tricks, like surreptitiously throwing a handful of coins on the ground for the pleasure of watching rich men get down on their hands and knees with their bums in the air. One of his favourite penchants with the ladies, on the other hand, is to ornament their naked and prostrate forms with anything from flowers, to fruit, to funds from his growing pocket book. One particularly striking moment is when he decorates a naked brothel girl (who looks worryingly like Kylie Minogue) in large margarita daisies. The scene is as arresting as the nude-and-rose-petals shot in American Beauty, or the female-served-for-dinner in The Cook The Thief His Wife & Her Lover.

    Menzel's taste for a decadent protagonist is in no way sullied by shame. His whores are creatures of beauty: "The scent of raspberry trailed behind her. She stepped out in that silk dress, full of peonies, and bees hovered around her like a Turkish honey store." ('Bees' you will note, not 'flies'.) The description follows an incident where the lady in question pours raspberry grenadine over herself - to stop Díte from getting into trouble.

    I Served the King of England soon becomes rife with political and social comment, even before we get to the eponymous and very loaded comment by Díte's boss boasting his resumé. Having treated us to sumptuous society, the film reminds us of the cost: "I discovered that those who said 'work is ennobling' were the same men who drank all night and ate with lovely young ladies seated on their knees." The palatial buildings, over-refined manners and ostentatious egregiousness of old Europe belie the fabled shangrila on which they are modelled. As we witness the Nazi and then Communist take-overs, the film touches on many issues that have affected the creation and difficult continuation of the country now known as the Czech Republic. Amusingly, the Nazi ideal of 'racial purity' enables Díte to continue his lifestyle - his German fiancé secures him a job at a breeding ground for top military studs.

    The best parts of the film are full of beauty and sadness. An old man reminisces: "We, in the 20th century, are inclined to see the glory in ourselves and the shame in others – that's how the mess got started." The latter half of the film gradually becomes more serious in tone, even didactic. Here is your history lesson, insight into human nature, poetry and great literary adaptation all in one, it seems to be saying to us.

    I Served the King of England is a film on an enormous scale. It makes a valiant attempt to be a masterpiece, but feels as if it didn't have quite enough time to display its flaunted genius. One cannot help but admire it. Even if it doesn't quite reach the dizzying heights to which it aspires.
    7Red-125

    "I see nothing, I hear nothing"

    Obsluhoval jsem anglického krále (2006), written and directed by Jirí Menzel, is a Czech film shown in the U.S. with the title, "I Served the King of England." Menzel directed "Closely Watched Trains," one of the great movies of the 1960's.

    Using flash forwards and flash backs, we follow the life of Jan Díte, played as a young man by Ivan Barnev, and as an older man by Oldrich Kaiser. Díte is obsessed with becoming a millionaire, and the younger Díte manages to accomplish this goal by his total unconcern for the plight of his country and his fellow Czechs.

    When the Germans invade Sudetenland, and then the rest of Czechoslovakia, Díte takes it all in stride, calmly embracing--figuratively--the Nazi invaders and--literally--a lovely young Nazi woman. I think we are supposed to perceive him as naive and innocent, but my interpretation is that he is willfully ignorant and basically uncaring. My mother always said, "There are none so blind as those who will not see." That quote perfectly fits Díte's character.

    The film has some comic moments, and the views of Prague are lovely. The movie is worth watching if the opportunity arises, but not worth strenuously seeking out. We saw it at the Rochester High Falls International Film Festival. It will work well on DVD.
    8didierfort

    Teaching cynicism or how-growing-old?

    Obsluhoval jsem anglického krále (Jiří Menzel, 2006, 2h00) is very hard a movie to write on. Obviously, Bohumil Hrabal squares things up with Czech history or nationalism. His main character, brilliantly set up by Jiří Menzel (let's remember "Trains closely watched" and "The Aventures of private Ivan Tchonkin") is a sort of naive though ambitious petty crook, almost reaching his aim transformed into an ideal (becoming a millionaire) until History catch him back, after February 1948.

    An older man, though not broken, is opening the movie : Jan is freed after serving 15 years ("which, thanks to amnesty, became 14 years and 9 months") in state prison. We follow older Jan Dite in Sudentenland, now a desert since Germans were expelled after WWII. He remembers his rise - mainly through women, generally whores, caring with him because his charm et his sweetness and invention in bed. This is the center of numerous flash-backs making the bigger part of the film. Nothing wrong to say about musical score, special effects (delicate and charming), casting (all women are beautiful), acting, filming and editing. Everything works, no flaws.

    The problem, if there is a problem, lies in the hero and almost all of the characters he is mixed with : all are of a rather repulsively vulgar cynicism, which becomes the philosophy Jan uses to transform his first poor dream into an ideal. And those who are not of this kind are lead by nationalism - narrow minded (the Czechs) or hideous (the Nazi school-mistress Jan falls for). Oddly enough, the only one redeemed for us is the head waiter in Hotel Paris, who is Czech, righteous and courageous. Is it to tone down Hrabal's thesis?

    So the whole story looks like an enormous bitter (and sophisticated) farce Menzel filmed on behalf of Hrabal's feelings.

    Besides, there is still something in the movie, which make its vision not one-sided : a bitter-sweet taste given by the face of mature if not old men in front of women beauty, and the visible and overwhelming nostalgia this beauty vivify in their mind. They remember, and they smile... Isn't it there some kind of a sketch, the sketch of a how-to-grow-old handbook?
    8bob998

    Recalls the greats of cinema past

    I got a bit of a shock when I saw this film. It doesn't seem to follow the rules of contemporary film-making--in other words, women aren't shown as fully equal to men (although they can be very resourceful in dealing with petty tyranny) and the hero shows no sign of resentment for the way he is treated. I felt a lot closer to the great works of the heyday of classic film by Cukor, Ophuls and Lubitsch. The story unfolds calmly and logically, whether the events take place in the 30's, 40's or 50's of the last century. Ivan Barnev as the young Jan is superb: funny, roguish and balletic (just watch how gracefully he swoops around the restaurant with that heavy tray; wonder how much rehearsal time that needed.) Jiri Menzel made Closely Watched Trains, then saw his career go into eclipse after the Soviet invasion in 1968. The work he has done since hasn't come to my attention until now. This may be his swan-song, since he is 70 now, but I hope not.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The scenes for the Hotel Pariz restaurant were filmed in the main restaurant in Prague's Obecni Dum (Civic House), just around the corner from the actual Hotel Pariz. Both restaurants were designed in the Art Nouveau style by artist Alphons Mucha, but the Obecni Dum restaurant is larger.
    • Blooper
      Jan sees a train full of people being deported to a concentration camp. A closeup of one of the cars shows men within wearing gray and white striped uniforms. However, deportees were sent to the camps wearing their civilian clothes and weren't issued uniforms until after they arrived.
    • Citazioni

      Jan Díte, older: A person becomes most human, often against his own will, when he begins to founder, when he is derailed and deprived of order.

    • Connessioni
      Edited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)
    • Colonne sonore
      Ted' jeste ne
      (English title: "Not Yet")

      Written by Jaroslav Jezek

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 11 gennaio 2007 (Repubblica Ceca)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Repubblica Ceca
      • Slovacchia
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Farbfilm-Verleih (Germany)
      • Offficial site (Czech Republic)
    • Lingue
      • Ceco
      • Tedesco
      • Francese
      • Inglese
      • Italiano
      • Coreano
      • Ungherese
    • Celebre anche come
      • I Served the King of England
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Harrachov, Repubblica Ceca
    • Aziende produttrici
      • AQS
      • Barrandov Studios
      • Bioscop
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 84.450.000 CZK (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 617.403 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 53.218 USD
      • 31 ago 2008
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 7.354.478 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 53 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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