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Marketa Lazarová

  • 1967
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
6.5K
YOUR RATING
Marketa Lazarová (1967)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer2:41
1 Video
73 Photos
EpicPeriod DramaDramaHistoryRomance

A grim portrayal of the shift from Paganism to Christianity in medieval central Europe - as a young virgin promised to God is kidnapped and raped by a marauder who her religious father seeks... Read allA grim portrayal of the shift from Paganism to Christianity in medieval central Europe - as a young virgin promised to God is kidnapped and raped by a marauder who her religious father seeks to kill in return.A grim portrayal of the shift from Paganism to Christianity in medieval central Europe - as a young virgin promised to God is kidnapped and raped by a marauder who her religious father seeks to kill in return.

  • Director
    • Frantisek Vlácil
  • Writers
    • Frantisek Pavlícek
    • Vladislav Vancura
    • Frantisek Vlácil
  • Stars
    • Josef Kemr
    • Magda Vásáryová
    • Nada Hejna
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    6.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frantisek Vlácil
    • Writers
      • Frantisek Pavlícek
      • Vladislav Vancura
      • Frantisek Vlácil
    • Stars
      • Josef Kemr
      • Magda Vásáryová
      • Nada Hejna
    • 32User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 2:41
    Trailer [OV]

    Photos73

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    + 68
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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Josef Kemr
    Josef Kemr
    • Laird of Rohácek Kozlík
    Magda Vásáryová
    Magda Vásáryová
    • Lazar's Daughter Marketa
    Nada Hejna
    • Wife of Laird Rohácek Katerina
    Jaroslav Moucka
    Jaroslav Moucka
    • Son Jan
    Frantisek Velecký
    Frantisek Velecký
    • Son Mikolás
    Karel Vasicek
    • Son Jirí
    Ivan Palúch
    Ivan Palúch
    • Son Adam 'One-handed'
    Martin Mrazek
    • Son Václav
    Václav Sloup
    Václav Sloup
    • Jan's Son Simon
    Pavla Polaskova
    Pavla Polaskova
    • Daughter Alexandra
    Alena Pavlíková
    • Daughter Drahuse
    Michal Kozuch
    • Laird of Oboriste Lazar
    Zdenek Lipovcan
    • Lazar's Son Jakub
    Harry Studt
    Harry Studt
    • Saxon Count Kristián
    Vlastimil Harapes
    Vlastimil Harapes
    • Son of the Count of Saxony Kristián
    Zdenek Kutil
    • Count valet Reiner
    Frantisek Nechyba
    • Cabman
    Zdenek Kryzánek
    Zdenek Kryzánek
    • Royal Governor Pivo
    • Director
      • Frantisek Vlácil
    • Writers
      • Frantisek Pavlícek
      • Vladislav Vancura
      • Frantisek Vlácil
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    7.86.4K
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    Featured reviews

    njust

    hard-to-find but brilliant

    I've only seen this movie once, in a restored print at a film festival a few years back; it's apparently not available on video in the US, which is a real shame. It's a medieval epic, basically about the clash between the old pagan world and the emerging Christian one, but there's a lot more to it than that. Visually, it's nearly as stunning as *Andrei Rublev* (and a good bit faster-paced); some of the images - wolves roaming the barren forests, horsemen in snowstorms - will make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. I'll admit that I'm a sucker for gloomy, wintry European art movies, especially if they work some bloody sword-fights in, too, but this is one of the overlooked Great Movies ...
    9I_Ailurophile

    Exceptional, exquisite film (if lamentably tarnished by disordered presentation)

    The film's reputation very well precedes it; in the first moment that I learned of 'Marketa Lazarová,' I also learned it's regarded as perhaps the best Czech movie ever made. I can appreciate why - I'm not familiar with the novel the movie is adapted from, but the story is exquisite. The narrative is as bleak as it is expertly crafted, and deeply engrossing. There's strong attention to detail in all things - every shot, every article of the costume design, every sight of set design, and eye-catching filming locations. The vivid imagery of a historical drama becomes ever more stark captured in black and white, including the countenances of the actors. The assembled cast is outstanding - all those most prominent before the camera, of course (Magda Vásáryová above all, embodying the all-important title role with all due gravity) but even those in supporting roles, realizing every vivid emotion and tribulation. Factor in many extras as well, and the landscape of medieval Europe seems dazzlingly real and tangible.

    However - for as superb as the narrative is, and for as excellent as the picture is as a whole, I cannot say it's perfect. I have a rather difficult time engaging with the film at points, especially in the first half. The presentation of the story is disjointed: some story beats, or facets of each plot point that would round them out, are not expressed clearly, or at all. There is a substantial amount of narrative that does not play out before the camera, or dialogue that is spoken by figures who are not on-screen, and the audience is left to pick up the pieces and discern what they may. Fine as the tale is, it's extremely difficult to truly parse it without an outside synopsis to provide the context and clarification that the feature does not. For all the characters that are introduced, and given plenty of attention at varying points, the fates of some are left vague. The end result is that 'Marketa Lazarová' comes off not just as historical fiction, but an art film ruthlessly indifferent to conventional narrative flow.

    To be clear, I think this is a great, grand film. The story it tells is magnificent in and of itself, and complex, even as it's terribly grim. All technical aspects are fantastic, including the direction; the cast is swell; the writing, broadly, is marvelous. Some sequences are truly exceptional - outright phenomenal - particularly nearer the end. But there are also many ponderous gaps in the plot progression, and otherwise instances of inelegant telling, that gravely stymie the absolute mastery of cinema that the feature could and should have represented save for those faults. That 'Marketa Lazarová' nonetheless succeeds in being so splendid a work despite its flaws is a testament to the skills of all involved, but the deficiencies are unfortunate all the same.

    The content is oppressively dreary, and the execution as a whole has no few problems. Still, for all that: the immense quality, from start to finish, manages to well outweigh the issues of its rendering. I think this is a superlative example of what cinema can achieve that deserves far greater renown outside the Czech Republic; would only that the blemishes could have been cleared up. For many reasons this won't be a film that everyone can enjoy, but if one can look past the sometimes laborious effort that the viewing experience represents, I dare say this is essential. Though regrettably imperfect, 'Marketa Lazarová' is a captivating, striking exemplar of film that earns my most hearty recommendation, and it's very much worth watching by whatever means one is able.
    7psteier

    For lovers of the later films of Sergei Paradzhanov

    Set in medieval times when paganism was still strong, follows the violent exploits of a small, well off clan.

    Unlike most Hollywood 'history', the film does not just put modern people in ancient times, but attempts to reconstruct the society and lifestyle. Very fluid and poetic camera work.

    This is not a film for everyone.
    10kurosawakira

    Two Opposites

    Some of the most rewarding film experiences I know of annotate the medium itself, oftentimes than not so elliptically it's almost impossible to see at first. I don't mean Fellini's "8 ½" (1963) or "F for Fake" (1974) and their ilk; these are explicitly self-referential films, not that there's anything wrong in that. The films I am referring to aren't really self-referentially about film on narrative level, rather about something else entirely; they become film allegories by extension, as if in the periphery, accidentally.

    "Marketa Lazarová" (1967), so audaciously otherworldly, is a film like that. I've seen it twice now, and slowly it's starting to reveal its riches. The first time around my expectations misled me to approach it as something closer to Tarkovsky's "Andrei Rublev" (1966), and while there are similarities, the film is so radical it's not that fitting a comparison in my mind.

    The backdrop for the film is a profound historical and cultural paradigm shift where Christianity and paganism battle it out. Two opposites, the film can be seen as a poetic exploration of this struggle, and thus as a social document. While interesting, something else speaks to me more. For me the two allegorical forces at play are those of image and sound, and their use in film world, in filmic language. They often go their own ways, images showing us something and the narration swerving to somewhere else altogether, and the complex array of characters and their unorthodox introduction and presentation in the film underline the effect of confusion very powerfully. The overdubbed, echoing dialogue, often out of sync with the image, distracted me on first viewing, but it's unmistakably fitting in the grand scheme of things. Some images are so powerful I can't get them out of my mind (not that I'd want to, mind you!)

    And the music! It's the highest compliment I can think of when I say for a film so visually rich that you should not only see it but listen to it. Liska's contribution to the film in some ways contributes to the modest thesis I've been trying to form in so short a space, that is the wonderful interplay of sound and image. Kieslowski's "Trois couleurs: Bleu" (1993) might compare if I wanted to search for something as equally stunning as this.

    And I can't write about the film without mentioning the most wonderful sound I've come across in film. It's the convent bell, and one can hear it towards the very beginning, during the revelation and just before the intertitles, I think, and I think it's repeated at least once later on.

    All in all, what an experience. We're lucky to have two Blu-rays of the film, the first a Czech Region B, the second a Criterion Region A release. The first one does have English subtitles.
    10ireland-6

    Fabulously magnificent

    "Marketa Lazarova" was a film I saw in 1970 at a small film theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It left an indelible memory, and I've spent years trying to find a way to see it again. At least once a year, I find a note I left about a phone call I've made to some obscure library or other such place in the hope of finding a way to see it.

    The film won an Academy Award, and it should be remembered. It is stunning in black and white; the story is remarkable in its content and direction.

    If anyone has ideas about how we fans can possibly revive this movie, we should try to do so. It is worth all the trouble and more just to see it again and again.

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    History
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Frantisek Vlácil not only had the clothes painstakingly researched and hand-sewn, he had the cast live in the forest for the two years of shooting so they could get into the 13th century mindset.
    • Goofs
      In a scene where Marketa observes a reindeer in the forest, you can see a director Frantisek Vlácil in jacket in the left of the frame. He was actually trying to scare deer, because they didn't want to move. This could be seen only on some of the Blu-Ray and DVD versions.
    • Alternate versions
      The UK release was cut, a cut was required to remove sight of a snake being stabbed and rearing up in pain, in order to obtain a 15 classification. The cut was made on the basis of BBFC policy on genuine animal cruelty. An uncut classification was not available.
    • Connections
      Edited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 24, 1967 (Czechoslovakia)
    • Country of origin
      • Czechoslovakia
    • Languages
      • Czech
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Marketa Lazarova
    • Filming locations
      • Klokocín, Czech Republic(castle)
    • Production company
      • Filmové studio Barrandov
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 42m(162 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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