NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
3,2 k
MA NOTE
Quelques jours dans la vie d'un adolescent tchèque lorsqu'il commence à travailler.Quelques jours dans la vie d'un adolescent tchèque lorsqu'il commence à travailler.Quelques jours dans la vie d'un adolescent tchèque lorsqu'il commence à travailler.
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires au total
Susan Kodicek
- Asina kamarádka
- (as Zuzana Oprsalova)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is Milos Forman's directorial debut. He directed some documentaries earlier,
- Citations
[last lines]
Zdenek: [Zdenek enters Peter's home to call his buddy Cenda, interrupting a family discussion] Good afternoon. Please, can you hurry? Let's go.
zednický ucen Cenda Semerád: Wait! This is interesting here, comrade. This is my friend.
Petruv otec: "Interesting", "Comrade". So this is interesting to you.
zednický ucen Cenda Semerád: Oh no, it's not interesting at all. On the contrary.
Petruv otec: You don't even know what we're talking about. You don't know what's it like. It's... it's...
- ConnexionsEdited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)
Commentaire à la une
"Black Peter" marks as acclaimed director Milos Forman ("One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest", "Amadeus") first film after spending some time as a
documentarian and what a remarkable, jolly, honest and funny film that he gave us. It's not a mirror to life, it is life, and it's one of those rare
times that a motion picture manages to translate the teenage years with a freshness and almost uniqueness to everything that you forget you're watching
a movie, it really feels life unfolding. It's positive but not cynical, it's about the torments of youth with some achievements and plenty of disappointments
and misunderstandings, and with those series of events we have something that doesn't reek of the excitment and recklessness of youth as commonly depicted
on Hollywood movies.
We follow the adventures of Peter (the great Ladislav Jakim), a 17-year-old teen with three constant things to achieve: get a job and keep it; to have some fun out partying while he's not there; and get a girl. He gets all that, rest assured, but it's never exactly what he thought it would be or he's not seeing things properly or acting properly. He's a disaster at his job working as a security checkout at a supermarket, and I loved every moment of innocence displayed by the little guy - he simply can't perform when needed while following clients or potential shoplifters (anxious sequences yet hilariously funny); and as for the girl (Pavla Martinkova) and later on the party they attend it becomes a series of how to behave properly, what to talk about and the typical teenage awkwardness a majority goes through. Basically he wants sex but he doesn't have a certain approach for that. It gets more troublesome with the constant interruptions of two young bricklayers (Vladimír Pucholt and Zdenek Kulhanek), of whom the couple had a brief altercation. That duo is priceless as well and the whole dance party sequence is hysterical.
Through the course of four days, it all revolves about those great conquests where he can say he's a grown up, but also to appease the war at home with his demanding father and countless hard life lessons, or at least look good for his boss. We've seen this before, that's life and Peter walks through those issues with an everlasting sense of what to do. I greatly identified with this character since he's got that vibe of never knowing what he wants but knowing exactly what he doesn't want, and sometimes those things push each other. Example: he wants to be with the girl, wants to know her better but probably doesn't want her as a girlfriend and all the demands that come with such, or at the very least he wants to make use of his hormones.
This is one of the finest representatives of the Czech New Wave cinema (from the period Forman also has "Loves of a Blonde", "The Firemen's Ball"), with new filmmaking techniques, themes treated and a wide-eyed criticism on social/political issues, specially against the Communist regime they were under at the time. This one sounds less critical on such theme, but it's there deepened in its core. What we have mostly on the foreground is the wildly amusing story of a teen growing up, the experiences he acquires on the period, with the new people who comes his way (usually abrupt and bumpy encounters) and just trying things, see if it works or not. This is the perfect anti-thesis of many coming of age movies where everything is bright, happy and magical and the sense of responsibility is almost non existent. "Black Peter" is about disappointment, frustrations and things not being as cracked up to be yet it's fun because of all that since that period is exactly like that, for the brief time that exists in the transition from childhood to adulthood; and plus it's one of the last opportunities where one can fail a little and not make things as the end of the world. There's a sense of charm and innocence so real and appealing here that's almost impossible not to like this film. 10/10
P. S.: but why on Earth did the bricklayer dropped his shorts before the fight? I'm still clueless on that.
We follow the adventures of Peter (the great Ladislav Jakim), a 17-year-old teen with three constant things to achieve: get a job and keep it; to have some fun out partying while he's not there; and get a girl. He gets all that, rest assured, but it's never exactly what he thought it would be or he's not seeing things properly or acting properly. He's a disaster at his job working as a security checkout at a supermarket, and I loved every moment of innocence displayed by the little guy - he simply can't perform when needed while following clients or potential shoplifters (anxious sequences yet hilariously funny); and as for the girl (Pavla Martinkova) and later on the party they attend it becomes a series of how to behave properly, what to talk about and the typical teenage awkwardness a majority goes through. Basically he wants sex but he doesn't have a certain approach for that. It gets more troublesome with the constant interruptions of two young bricklayers (Vladimír Pucholt and Zdenek Kulhanek), of whom the couple had a brief altercation. That duo is priceless as well and the whole dance party sequence is hysterical.
Through the course of four days, it all revolves about those great conquests where he can say he's a grown up, but also to appease the war at home with his demanding father and countless hard life lessons, or at least look good for his boss. We've seen this before, that's life and Peter walks through those issues with an everlasting sense of what to do. I greatly identified with this character since he's got that vibe of never knowing what he wants but knowing exactly what he doesn't want, and sometimes those things push each other. Example: he wants to be with the girl, wants to know her better but probably doesn't want her as a girlfriend and all the demands that come with such, or at the very least he wants to make use of his hormones.
This is one of the finest representatives of the Czech New Wave cinema (from the period Forman also has "Loves of a Blonde", "The Firemen's Ball"), with new filmmaking techniques, themes treated and a wide-eyed criticism on social/political issues, specially against the Communist regime they were under at the time. This one sounds less critical on such theme, but it's there deepened in its core. What we have mostly on the foreground is the wildly amusing story of a teen growing up, the experiences he acquires on the period, with the new people who comes his way (usually abrupt and bumpy encounters) and just trying things, see if it works or not. This is the perfect anti-thesis of many coming of age movies where everything is bright, happy and magical and the sense of responsibility is almost non existent. "Black Peter" is about disappointment, frustrations and things not being as cracked up to be yet it's fun because of all that since that period is exactly like that, for the brief time that exists in the transition from childhood to adulthood; and plus it's one of the last opportunities where one can fail a little and not make things as the end of the world. There's a sense of charm and innocence so real and appealing here that's almost impossible not to like this film. 10/10
P. S.: but why on Earth did the bricklayer dropped his shorts before the fight? I'm still clueless on that.
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- 3 janv. 2024
- Permalien
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
- How long is Black Peter?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Black Peter
- Lieux de tournage
- République tchèque(formerly Czechoslovakia)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 25 minutes
- Couleur
- 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 L'as de pique (1964) officially released in India in English?
Répondre