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Moi, Olga

Original title: Já, Olga Hepnarová
  • 2016
  • 12
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Michalina Olszanska in Moi, Olga (2016)
Period DramaTrue CrimeBiographyCrimeDramaThriller

Based on the true life of Olga Hepnarová, a young Czech woman who became a rampage killer in 1973.Based on the true life of Olga Hepnarová, a young Czech woman who became a rampage killer in 1973.Based on the true life of Olga Hepnarová, a young Czech woman who became a rampage killer in 1973.

  • Directors
    • Petr Kazda
    • Tomás Weinreb
  • Writers
    • Roman Cílek
    • Tomás Weinreb
    • Petr Kazda
  • Stars
    • Michalina Olszanska
    • Martin Pechlát
    • Klára Melísková
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Petr Kazda
      • Tomás Weinreb
    • Writers
      • Roman Cílek
      • Tomás Weinreb
      • Petr Kazda
    • Stars
      • Michalina Olszanska
      • Martin Pechlát
      • Klára Melísková
    • 13User reviews
    • 101Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 26 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:36
    Official Trailer

    Photos159

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    Top cast55

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    Michalina Olszanska
    Michalina Olszanska
    • Olga Hepnarová
    Martin Pechlát
    Martin Pechlát
    • Miroslav
    Klára Melísková
    Klára Melísková
    • Mother
    Marika Soposká
    Marika Soposká
    • Jitka
    Juraj Nvota
    • Advocate
    Ondrej Malý
    Ondrej Malý
    • Psychiatrist Spyrka
    Martin Finger
    Martin Finger
    • Dr. Hronec
    Marta Mazurek
    Marta Mazurek
    • Alena
    Zuzana Stavná
    Zuzana Stavná
    • Sister
    Ivan Palúch
    Ivan Palúch
    Malwina Turek
    • Gypsy Girl
    Gabriela Mícová
    Gabriela Mícová
    • Psychiatrist Rabska
    Jan Novotny
    • Judge
    Viktor Vrabec
    Viktor Vrabec
    • Father
    Roman Zach
    Roman Zach
    • Psychiatrist Vaverka
    Lena Schimscheiner
    • Girl in hospital
    Lukás Bech
    Lukás Bech
    • Prosecutor
    Blazej Wójcik
    • Directors
      • Petr Kazda
      • Tomás Weinreb
    • Writers
      • Roman Cílek
      • Tomás Weinreb
      • Petr Kazda
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.62.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7centrum99

    A chilly experience, but still a missed opportunity

    Rating this movie is not an easy task for me. It has its strengths, but also aspects that I could not digest. First, the black-and-white picture is fine and takes you back to the 1970s. But a movie without opening credits and absolutely no music was somewhat shocking. Actually, most of the movie consists of short, mutually unconnected scenes, where people don't talk, and are just sitting or standing.

    Although this "art style" captures the gloomy inner world of Olga, I can not ignore that it is disrespectful to the audience who may have problems to understand, what is actually happening on the screen. The original version reportedly lasted 2 1/2 hours and the editor's digital scissors reduced it on the border of comprehensibility. And I say this as a man who had studied the entire history of Hepnarova and I was able to successfully predict what will follow in the next few minutes. Undoubtedly, the movie will lose spectators due to these insensitive cuts. And that's a pity, because the second half - starting from the massacre through the trial up to the execution - is already filmed in the chilly spirit that I expected.

    It is here, where Michalina Olszańska shows her superb performance, and with her, this whole spectacle stands and falls. The probe into Olga's depressing psyche is the true peak of the movie. The filmmakers also try to be authentic and virtually all presented scenes are based on real testimonies, Olga's letters and court documents. It is only in the lesbian scenes, where they apparently exaggerate. For example, Hepnarova was in love with her female colleague, but they have never had any intimate relationship. Even the openly lesbian contact at the disco party is odd in Czechoslovakia of the 1970s - to say the least. (Although it is again inspired by the fact, because Olga liked provoking and was sometimes wearing a jacket on a naked body.)

    As a whole, this film biography of Olga Hepnarova is impressive and leaves feelings that will fly you off the handle for many hours. In fact, it is not unusual that during the final credits, spectators remain downright frozen to their seats. However, I am still sorry that the final result could have been even better. If I were in place of the directors, I would take the movie as Olga's retrospective narrative during interrogation. Her own words would cover the "dead spots" in the story and explain her inner feelings. Too late...
    9petokadlecik

    A great insight into a sick mind.

    To fully appreciate this film one probably should have a minimum knowledge about psychiatry and of schizophrenia in general.

    The main character in this film, Olga Hepnarova, is IMO one of the best depictions of a schizophrenic person I've ever seen in a movie. In this regard, the movie makers did an extraordinary good job. The atmosphere of the film is dark, yet the individual scenes are often banal and the dialogues short and often flat and trivial. This however is not of disadvantage to the movie as one would expect. It actually helps to unfold to the viewer the deep, but chaotic and hate-focused thoughts that go inside the mind of Hepnarova. The scenes where she contemplates the traumatizing experiences of her life are deep and sad, showing that she is a very complex and deeply thinking person, but at the same time they succeed to NOT depict her as a martyr, which she clearly fails to be. She despises society and is fond to do it a favor (by killing herself) only in her best life-time when she's deeply in love (with her lesbian lover). Hepnarova is evil, but in the movie it looks more like real-world-evil with its full complexity and context, not the common flat movie-evil known from pop-culture. This also adds to the uniqueness of the movie and probably makes many viewers to sympathize with her. Not to mention the great acting by Michalina Olszanska.

    I would appreciate more family scenes in the film. I think it would be beneficial for a better understanding of Hepnarova's mind. In particular the roots of her hatred towards her family. But in conclusion I have to take my hat off to the movie makers, they exactly knew what they wanted to deliver and they delivered it. A sad depiction of a sick mind driven to the edge (partially by the society and partially by herself) until the bitter end.
    7planktonrules

    Well made but NOT a film the average person would even watch in the first place.

    In Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1973, Olga Hepnarová drove her truck through a crowd of elderly people waiting on the sidewalk. Olga's actions were deliberate and planned….and she ended up killing 8 innocent people in the process. Now, over four decades later, filmmakers Petr Kazda and Tomás Weinreb have brought her story to the big screen—perhaps in light of several similar acts committed throughout the world by jihadists. But viewers of the film need to be a very specific and patient lot, as the movie clearly is not one intended for the average viewer.

    The film begins the teenage Olga attempting suicide and as a result being incarcerated in a rather awful mental hospital. While the film didn't make this clear, she apparently was in and out of mental institutions during much of her life. The film then picks up with Olga as a young adult, working and having various sexual relationships. The publicity material for the film describes her as a lesbian and the film also takes that approach, though I read up on her and apparently she was bisexual. I am not sure why they chose to portray her as a lesbian but viewers will see quite a bit of Olga and several of her lovers. Regardless, this is not a film for the prudish.

    It is odd that Olga is shown as being so sexual since she also had a very strong hatred for the human race and felt she was the world's 'whipping boy'. The film uses the German word 'prügelknabe'—which I had to look up on the internet and I am mentioning this in case you see the film and find yourself confused by the term. But regardless, Olga hated people and had a very strong persecution complex. And, as a result, she apparently felt completely justified to murder the people at the bus stop.

    Now it's obvious that Olga was not in her right mind. She was flat emotionally and intensely angry deep within her. Most would consider her insane. However, she knew what she was doing and simply did not care and admitted this freely in court. So what was the court to do with her?

    This is a very well crafted film. The filmmakers used black & white footage which I think was a good move since the story took place in the late 60s and early 70s. Michalina Olszanska also did a superb job portraying the title character as it would not be easy playing someone with so little emotion nor with much connection to others. But this brings up a problem…if the main character is this emotionally constricted and the film is told from her point of view, is it an easy film to watch? This is obviously no for most people. You have to have an interest in the subject matter and you have to be very patient, as the film is slow and almost completely bereft of energy. Olga is severely depressed…and it is draining, at times, watching her. I was able to stick with this because of my own background as a therapist, though I sure could have done without the vomiting scene early in the film. I have no idea why in recent years filmmakers have decided to show close-ups of folks throwing up…and I think this is perhaps taking realism a bit too far. Overall, for the right viewers, "I, Olga" is well worth seeing but for most it's just too much of a downer.
    10batemefo

    An excellent film! Another confirmation of the well known quality of Czech cinema.

    Tackling a very difficult subject in a rigid social environment like communist Czechoslovakia in the 70's, this film has done it great!

    The female lead -the very young Polish actress Michalina Olszanska is doing the impossible while portraying an extremely complex character that no-one would otherwise understand or empathize.

    The cinematic recreation of the atmosphere of Prague in the early 70's is so true, that this this black & white film looks like it was really shot in the Seventies. Only the stable digital image suggests else.

    I do recommend this movie to all sensitive viewers who wish to look deeper in to the human and social issues.
    7ferguson-6

    A strong will

    Greetings again from the darkness. Most youngsters have executed a perfect eye roll on at least one occasion after receiving a dose of parental advice that seemed irrelevant to them at the time. An early scene in this biopic finds teenage Olga listening as her mother says, "To commit suicide you need a strong will, my child. Something you certainly don't have. Accept it." This is a warning shot fired at the audience to be cautious when judging the actions of the last woman executed in Czechoslovakia.

    Co-directors Petr Kazda and Tomas Weinred seem to believe that most viewers will be familiar with Olga's story, and presume the film's austere look, lack of flow, and structure of seemingly unrelated scenes will provide a sense of the choppiness and isolation that might explain her otherwise inexplicable actions. Based on Olga's true story and the book from Roman Cilek, the film will have you questioning whether her behavior was the result of horrible parenting, or more closely related to her psychological issues – perhaps even schizophrenia.

    Michalina Olszamska (The Lure) delivers a committed performance as Olga, the 22 year old woman who in 1972 drove a truck into a group of people in Prague, killing 8 (all between the ages of 60 and 79). A year later she was hanged, becoming the last woman executed in Czechoslovachia.

    The movie focuses on the various elements and key moments of her life – father's abuse, mother's iciness, attempted suicide, treatment in asylum, rejection by a lover – that led to her isolation and feelings of alienation. We sense her internal rage building over time, and her inability to cope or even connect with others; though at times we question whether her troubles are by choice or a result of her treatment … it's kind of a twist on the nature vs. nurture debate.

    There have been other fine movies that have dealt with a similar theme: There's Something About Kevin, The Omen, The Bad Seed. Each of these deal with the whole good vs evil idea … are some kids born "bad" or are they pushed that way? Either way, it's a parent's worst nightmare. This black and white presentation allows us to keep our emotional distance from Olga, and the no frills approach provides a quite chilling reenactment of how Olga ended up sending a letter to the local newspaper announcing her intention to seek "revenge" for the hatred that society had heaped upon her for years.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Based on the crimes of Olga Hepnarová (b. June 30, 1951) who on July 10, 1973 drove a rented truck into a group of about 25 people waiting for a tram in Prague, Czechoslovakia, all aged between 60 to 79, killing 8 of them. Before the murder, she sent a letter to two newspapers explaining her action as revenge for all the hatred against her by her family and the world. She was found to be sane and sentenced to death. The execution took place on March 12, 1975 in the Pankrác Prison in Prague. She was the last woman executed in Czechoslovakia.
    • Quotes

      Mother: To commit suicide you need a strong will, my child. Something you certainly don't have. Accept it.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Vsechnopárty: Episode dated 19 October 2012 (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      P.F. 1972, part I.
      Music by Marián Varga

      Performed by Collegium Musicum

      album: Konvergencie

      Opus 1971

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 6, 2016 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Czech Republic
      • Poland
      • France
      • Slovakia
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • Czech
      • Slovak
    • Also known as
      • I, Olga Hepnarova
    • Filming locations
      • Nowa Ruda, Dolnoslaskie, Poland
    • Production companies
      • Black Balance
      • Frame100r
      • Mediabrigade
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $227,466
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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