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Záhrada (1995)

User reviews

Záhrada

19 reviews
9/10

A Gem

A beautiful movie, with a dreamlike feel to it. The main character is Jakub who has fallen out with his father and has moved into a ramshackle house in the countryside. There is an overgrown garden and orchard.It is organised in chapters like a book, as Jakub encounters various odd visitors to the house and garden. Don't expect much of a message or action, just sit back and enjoy.
  • poc-1
  • Jul 9, 2002
  • Permalink
9/10

Konecne je vsetko tak, ako ma byt

Truly satisfying slovak art film.

I am from Slovakia and I watched this film with my dad, who went to the cinema for this film when it was released. Now, he rewatched it with me after 30 years and he could not stop saying how it reminds him of his childhood times in the village called "Pondelok" to which he casually refers to as a true and only home. He also said how authentic it is in terms of screenplay with all the problematic that is discussed. He said that the philosophy insertion(references to Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Ludwig Wittgenstein) was spot on as young students(just as my dad back then) all over Slovakia were contemplating about everything in global level after Velvet Revolution. But he also stressed that it was genuine with such details as hair shearer, cars and interior and exterior of the shack in general.

For me, as someone who loves philosophy and films, this film was really positive surprise. Cinematography and love/countryside plot were original, satisfying, deep and artistic, it was an allegory. Film was enriched by comical passages through the character of Jacob's father played by wonderful Marián Labuda(his son made cameo in this pic as the barman as well). Presenting each chapter in historical slovak vernacular felt like typical works of Hviezdoslav or Kukucin from slovak realism in literature, and I found it kind. Mirror-rotated writings were so creative too. Caterpillar reflection was amazing. I didn't completely get the end, with the levitation stuff, felt magical though. But I am gonna probably rewatch it some time later for sure and have some conversation about it with my dad at the same time.

I didn't save on words in this review, but I needed this so bad to feel comfortable inside, if you know what I mean.

I am not affraid to put this movie into comparison to some slovak classics like "The shop on main street" or "Perinbaba", because this film is important as it speaks its own context based on own period of time in Slovakia. This should be refered to as our(the Slovaks) cinematographic legacy.

Dakujem za krasny film.
  • JanRZ
  • Jan 21, 2023
  • Permalink
9/10

The garden we all dream about

Have you ever dreamt about Love ? The one which comes out of nowhere, turns your world upside down, heals all your wounds and gives your life a meaning ? Now this movie is about a love like this. It is a contemporary romantic fairy tale with a good sense of humor achieved by not taking itself too seriously. You won't regret seeing it.
  • tpolakov
  • Feb 10, 2001
  • Permalink
10/10

One of the best Slovakian movies made after 1989

Martin Sulik's poetic vision of reality offers an interesting probe into the relationship between an elderly father (Marian Labuda) and his son Jakub (Roman Luknar) in his early 30's. The main story is happening in the old garden, which belonged to Jakub's grand father. In this mysterious place he finds the peace he was looking for so desperately. What is even more important - the father and the son finally find the way to each other. Like in other Sulik's movies, the plot, story and tension are not the most important. This kind of poetic cinematography is more about the mood and quite hardly identifiable joy coming from "no one knows what". A timeless independent movie. Good work.
  • pavolstrba
  • Dec 16, 2005
  • Permalink
10/10

Good entertainment and high art in one

One of the best movies I have ever seen. A visually beautiful, modern fairy-tale. This movie can be enjoyed as a comedy with a witty plot and a perfect cast, and, as an essay in the history of culture with archetypical characters and situations. Sulik has a distinctive style of his own, which he continues to develop also in his latest work, "Orbis Pictus", but I think "Garden" is his best movie so far. If you ever get a chance to see it, do so - you will not regret.
  • spechax
  • Jan 10, 1999
  • Permalink

About nothing and about all

A film about origins and ordinary mysteries. About the nuances of childhood. About freedom. A school teacher and his father. A young woman. A girl. And a garden. A poem about roots and happiness. It is difficult to describe this movie. The story of Jakub is only self definition. Few parts, some characters as steps to real image of reality, trees and ants, magic and exile, knowledge and answers. Small drops of a spring rain. And the fly. It is a form of soul song. And shadow of lost ages. A fairy tall with taste of apples and summer vacation. Nothing complicated. Maybe, a Proust madlene. That movie type about nothing and all. A travel to memories and slice of silence. And nostalgics bones of a far world.
  • Vincentiu
  • Jul 30, 2010
  • Permalink
7/10

Surrealist funny idyll

  • Cristi_Ciopron
  • Jun 2, 2009
  • Permalink
10/10

Everyone wants to escape from the haste of our age.

Jakub is a teacher living in a flat with his father. After some quarrels he is asked to leave. He found a place to live at his grandfather's raddled house among fields in the countryside. Jakub starts to live a calm life, repairing the house and big garden. From time to time he encounters strange visitors - man who wants to be saint and wants Jakub to wash his feet, man who exchanges his broken car for Jakub's pretty good car etc. And mainly he has one regular visitor....magical girl, Helena. Not working he's fired from his job and decides not to go back to the city. Sometimes his father comes to visit him and they relationship gets better. Jakub starts to teach at the local school and stays with Helena. Just watch the poetry of this jewel of Slovak cinematography. You're gonna love it.
  • panteros
  • Feb 15, 2005
  • Permalink
7/10

Jakub and the sweet mysteries of the philosopher's garden

Young professor of letters leads to a tired and (un) comfortable routine between the forced cohabitation with his father, an elderly tailor long a widower, and the pitfalls of a mature and unsatisfied married woman. He lived with the dilapidated and neglected country home of his paternal grandfather, rediscovers the unexpected delights of a bucolic life in the care of a garden flourishing and abandoned, the legacy of the ancestor wise farmer and the enigmatic and enchanting presence of a young and mysterious girl. Small moral fable-toned light and sparse, the story of Sulik is a delightful fable ecologist who runs backwards along the path neglected and unknown of a return to nature, to its biological cycles and mystery, its remedies and its consolations, the alienating wisdom and magical alchemy of a rediscovery of self. The echo of a submissive and patient recall atavistic moves from the silent shadows of a garden dormant ancestral to the wishes of the young protagonist as the haunting song of a comely and remote siren that promises sensual reward for hidden treasures and immodest virtue. Ideally divided into 14 chapters (with a title and description) proposes the metaphor explicit diary and secret, the diegesis of a process that goes through the steps required for a journey of discovery and renewed awareness (from the comforts of an indolent life home town and enlightening the simplicity of rural life by the rhythms of time and seasons), where the meeting with the symbolic figures and goggled of mysterious wanderers (the saint who recalls Francis, the natural philosopher that recalls Rousseau and the rationalist conceptual recalling Wittgenstein) is the unexpected event of the fantastic, an unexpected materialization of unconscious desires that embody the prototypes examples of virtue 'philosophers'. Keeping the log lighter than a moral comedy film of the Slovak filmmaker manages to keep a safe distance the easy duplication of the symbolism of a cryptic language and convoluted as is the tired cliché of the grotesque typical of the western film to orient towards the rather rarefied elegy Soviet cinema (Tarkovskji, Konchalovskji) both in the choice of some visual solutions and color (the plane of the prologue sequence that opens the heavy foliage of an apple tree overflowing with fruits never caught, the use of a photograph saturated that enhances the varied polychrome Slovak autumn but especially the final sequence of levitation supine illuminating a lovely hag) that the use of a musical texture suspended between the mystery of the inevitable and that of a revelation. In almost vividly illustrative minimalism of the episodes you can see the thread of a deep feeling and arcane, mysterious sense of the time and nature through the things and people transforming them into the elements of a new cosmogony, the busty sensuality of the female body as a symbol of ancient the fertility of the earth, in the encryption of a mirrored language that you write and you read through the reflection of the signs of the real world, in the allusive complementary symmetry of destiny (the binomial mother-daughter and the father-son). Sulik signing his work original and fascinating at the bottom of the painting that appears at the beginning of the film (in the 'House of Jacob'): the icon of a cubist sore and tortured Saint Sebastian. Special Jury Prize at the 1995 'Karlovy Vary International Film Festival' and the 'International Festival of Young Cinema of Turin' and winner of five Czech Lions in 1996.
  • Maurizio73
  • Apr 12, 2013
  • Permalink
10/10

Best fairy tale ever

I don't know what is making me to see this movie again and again. I think is something under the line I can not describe. For me it is absolutely amazing movie and all I can say about it is that you have to see it. It is not about being a masterpiece or having million dollar budget, it is about feelings that will stay inside you for a while after seeing this. I don't know if somebody can imagine to be in position of Jakub, but I would like to be on his place every time he is spending his time in garden where you can feel the touch of ages. I think for people outside of Slovakia it could be nice look into Slovakian way of thinking.

Enjoy
  • arachnix
  • Feb 28, 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

7/10. Recommended

I think this is the first Slovak movie i watch. I found it due to a great list from another IMDB user. It's good, i liked it a lot. A comedy/drama/fantasy movie which it doesn't drag, on the contrary, it is interesting from the beginning untill the end. This is an artistic film but totally approachable, most of moviegoers will enjoy it. I can't say that i understood everything that happened here but maybe it was not even necessary, i mean, i enjoyed the ride without overthinking about it. To be honest, it's not some kind of mindblowing masterpiece, it's clever but not brilliant, it will probably not stay on my mind for long. Well acted and well directed.
  • athanasiosze
  • Feb 27, 2024
  • Permalink
10/10

Treasure

Every time I see this movie, my love for it grows. It is one of my treasures on VCR. It confronts you with life and living life, but not in a cynic way, which is often the case in film and literature. It shows the beauty and mystique of this world without being pretentious. The movie contains a great sense of humor, because humans are strange creatures with funny methods of approaching life and how they try to make sense of it. You have to love them for it, in spite or because of the mistakes they make.
  • kaat
  • Jun 4, 1999
  • Permalink
4/10

Slovakian director Martin Sulik makes an ordinary film about idleness.

In Slovakian film, "The Garden" the joys of idleness are shown in a broader setting of a troubled father/son relationship which is depicted in a variety of poignant scenes. One of these scenes for which viewers might like have a difference of opinion features a hilarious situation wherein the tailor father starts to trouble his flamboyant son while he was busy making love to a lady who also happens to be his father's regular customer. Apart from this troubled episode of things not being well for father/son duo, director Martin Sulik has shown an equally distressed relationship between a carefree young lass and her authoritarian mother. He provides additional lighter moments by showing the irrelevant confrontation between the film's leading man and the cuckolded husband of his lover. The Garden also attempts to include some important philosophical lessons for viewers' intellectual pleasure but fails miserably as Martin Sulik carries out an absolutely bad job of choosing inappropriate actors to portray two great philosophers Jean- Jacques Rousseau and Ludwig Wittgenstein. This is probably the reason why philosophical sentences concerning these two great men would not be retained by viewers for a very long time. Lastly, the division of this film into various chapters also does no good at all as it merely adds up to a boring tale moving at a slow pace.
  • FilmCriticLalitRao
  • Jun 21, 2013
  • Permalink
10/10

a mystical movie about the treasures in life

I absolutely love this movie. It gives you the feeling of entering a new dimension where the distinction between reality and fiction gradually vanishes. The powerful images of a mystical garden are dream like. It takes you to a place where you feel it touches your innermost wishes of tranquillity and peace. A dream within a dream, a fantasy that becomes reality. Let this movie take you to a place you never imagined existed and enjoy the ride.
  • ledhofman
  • Oct 21, 2003
  • Permalink
10/10

O, o, o.

Its not often that you see a movie, which you leave with two hearts in your breast, and your head filled with colourful words. And its not often that you can see a movie more than seven times, without noticing that the elements loose its magic one-by-one; without getting bored such as so easily happens when information gets repeatedly in touch with human conciousness.

But this incredible mixture of reality and fairy-tale, filosophy and lightness, makes it all work in a film, of which you have the feeling that it always existed, like The Odyssee itself. And then there is that girl!
  • Stakker
  • Nov 7, 1999
  • Permalink

best film i have ever seen

If you think movie in which nothing really happens must be boring... forget it. It's non-action and calm, but far from ,,artistic" and ,,intelligents-only" ones. It's hard to say what is it about (i have heard something about ,,seeking yourself" :-), because you simply sit and watch and after the movie you find yourself smiling to people around you - without necessarily for thinking about ,,what it meant and what it means for me".
  • quas
  • Mar 11, 1999
  • Permalink
10/10

the best movie I've seen (so far)

A marvelous tale of great beauty. It is advised to read 'Candide' (by Voltaire) as well (a very nice book indeed). This makes the movie even better.

Saw the movie three times, and I expect the number to rise.
  • jteertink
  • Feb 19, 2002
  • Permalink
10/10

Magical mystery tour.

Mysthicisme is not dead. The world is bigger than your imagination allows it to be. " Let your mind go, and the rest will follow." This movie shows that, in places you don't expect, you can find bewilderment, amazement and spirituality. I was amazed that within it's simplicity, the film lets you experience nothing and everything.
  • huib-van-santen
  • Aug 30, 2003
  • Permalink
10/10

Amazing movie

This movie is one of the biggest cinematography arts, amazing cast, movie spirit, peaceful and beautiful at the same time. I would love watching it in high resolution to enjoy every detail of it!
  • ifphugjc
  • Oct 24, 2020
  • Permalink

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