Cosy Dens
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Cosy Dens | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jan Hřebejk |
Written by | Petr Jarchovský Petr Šabach |
Produced by | Pavel Borovan Ondřej Trojan |
Starring | Miroslav Donutil Jiří Kodet Simona Stašová Emília Vášáryová Bolek Polívka |
Cinematography | Jan Malíř |
Edited by | Vladimír Barák |
Music by | Ivan Hlas Ivan Kral |
Distributed by | Česká televize |
Release date |
|
Running time | 115 minutes |
Country | Czech Republic |
Language | Czech |
Budget | 20,000,000 Kč |
Box office | 80,000,000 Kč[1] |
Cosy Dens (Template:Lang-cz) is a 1999 Czech film directed by Jan Hřebejk. It is loosely based on the novel Hovno Hoří (Czech: "Flaming Feces") by Petr Šabach. It was voted the best Czech film by Reflex magazine in 2011.
Plot summary
Pelíšky is a bittersweet coming-of-age story set in the months from Christmas 1967 leading up to the ill-fated 1968 Prague Spring. Teenager Michal Šebek (Michael Beran) has a crush on his upstairs neighbour, Jindřiška Krausová (Kristýna Nováková). Michal's family is headed by a stubborn army officer who is a firm supporter of the communist system and who believes that communist technology will eventually triumph over 'western imperialist capitalism', while Jindřiška's father is an ardent foe of the Communists and a war hero, who has been imprisoned several times because of his outspoken opposition to the regime; he believes that "the Bolsheviks have a year left at most, maybe two". In contrast, the younger generation could not care less for politics. Instead, Michal sports a Beatles mop-top while Elien (Ondřej Brousek), the local hipster whose parents live in the United States, runs a local film group specialising in Hollywood and pre-war French films, while Jindřiška becomes Elien's girlfriend. After a wedding that unites the families, the film ends with the news breaking of the invasion of the Warsaw Pact.
A dispute in the film illustrates the tension between the nationalistic and stalwartly anti-Communist father and Jindřiška, who is more apolitical. Jindřiška dares to suggest that her mother’s dumplings are closer to Italian gnocchi than traditional Czech knedliky (translated as "Viennese dumplings" in the English subtitles), sending her father into a rage. The plastic spoon on the poster refers to the gifts, miracles of "socialist science", which a Šebek uncle keeps sending the family and which always fail to perform as promised, humiliating Mr. Šebek. Both cases foreshadow how the political hopes of the fathers are destroyed by the coming Soviet invasion.[citation needed]
Trivia
Pelíšky was screened at the 1999 Vancouver Film Festival.
The Czech title is a plural and diminutive of the word "pelech", literally meaning animal den or burrow. It is used figuratively for a cosy hideout.[2]
Cast
- Michael Beran as Michal Šebek
- Ondřej Brousek as Elien
- Miroslav Donutil as Mr. Šebek
- Jaroslav Dušek as Saša Mašláň
- Eva Holubová as Eva (Teacher)
- Boris Hybner as Magician
- Sylvie Koblížková as Uzlinka Šebková
- Jiří Kodet as Mr. Kraus
- Jiří Krejčík as Doctor Stárek
- Marek Morvai as Petr
- Kristýna Nováková as Jindřiška Krausová
- Bolek Polívka as Uncle
- Simona Stašová as Mrs. Šebková
- Emília Vášáryová as Mrs. Krausová
- Stella Zázvorková as Grandmother
Soundtrack
The Pelíšky soundtrack was released in April, 1999, and contains clips of some of the actors memorable lines in addition to the musical numbers.
- Blue Effect – "Slunečný hrob"
- Miroslav Kaman, Jaroslav Dušek – "Dvě dávky"
- Václav Neckář – "Tu kytaru jsem koupil kvůli tobě"
- Boleslav Polívka – "Nebe na zemi"
- Kristýna Nováková, Michael Beran, Ondřej Brousek – "Kozačky..."
- Petr Novák & Flamengo – "Povídej"
- Kristýna Nováková, Michael Beran – "Něco jako příbuzný"
- Waldemar Matuška – "Pojď se mnou, lásko má"
- Emília Vášáryová, Jiří Kodet – "Dávám bolševikovi rok"
- Hana Hegerová – "Čerešně"
- Miroslav Donutil, Boleslav Polívka, Silvie Koblížková – "Nerozbitná sklenička"
- Kučerovci – "Ajo mama"
- Miroslav Donutil, Michael Beran – "Gagarinův bratr"
- Kučerovci – "La mulher rendeira"
- Stella Zázvorková, Simona Stašová, Miroslav Donutil, Boleslav Polívka – "Maršál Malinovskij"
- Judita Čeřovská – "Je po dešti"
- Eva Holubová, Jaroslav Dušek, Marek Morvai-Javorský – "Vyděržaj, pijaněr"
- Václav Neckář – "Lékořice"
- Emília Vášáryová, Kristýna Nováková, Jiří Kodet – "Noky"
- Karel Gott – "Santa lucia"
- Miroslav Donutil, Boleslav Polívka, Jiří Kodet – "Kde udělali soudruzi z NDR chybu?"
- Waldemar Matuška – "Mrholí"
- Eva Holubová, Jaroslav Dušek, Marek Morvai-Javorský – "Hoří hovno? ..."
- Karel Gott & Olympic – "Trezor"
- Jiří Kodet – "Proletáři všech zemí ..."
- Matadors – "Get Down From The Tree"
- Soulmen – "Baby Do Not Cry"
- Soulmen – "I Wish I Were"
- Blue Effect – "Snakes"
- Miroslav Donutil, Boleslav Polívka – "Průměrná ženská"
- Blue Effect – "Sluneční hrob"
References
- ^ "Jan Hřebejk chystá pátý film". Novinky.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 7 September 2017.
- ^ http://slovnik.cz
External links
- 1999 films
- Films set in 1967
- Films set in 1968
- Czech coming-of-age films
- Films directed by Jan Hřebejk
- Prague Spring
- Communism in fiction
- Films set in Prague
- Czechoslovakia in fiction
- Czech Lion Awards winners (films)
- Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in popular culture
- 1990s Czech-language films
- 1990s coming-of-age films