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7.1/10
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Expelled from university and Communist Party in the 1950s over a note to his girlfriend, Ludvik seeks revenge 15 years later by pursuing Helena, his accuser's wife.Expelled from university and Communist Party in the 1950s over a note to his girlfriend, Ludvik seeks revenge 15 years later by pursuing Helena, his accuser's wife.Expelled from university and Communist Party in the 1950s over a note to his girlfriend, Ludvik seeks revenge 15 years later by pursuing Helena, his accuser's wife.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Milan Svrcina
- Jaroslav
- (as Milan Svrciva)
Evald Schorm
- Kostka
- (as Ewald Schorm)
Michal Knapcik
- Soldier
- (as Michal Knapcík)
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Finally got to watch the film, based on Milan Kundera's wonderful novel--a film banned in the former Czechoslovakia for some 20 years after its initial release in theatres...thanks to a kind soul for uploading it on utube. The tale is a scathing indictment of Communists and Leftist totalitarian regimes worldwide, some existing to this day. Director Jiromil Jires and Kundera who was the co-scriptwriter, left out some minor details from the book relating to the actions of offspring the protagonist Ludwig's main tormentor and classmate. The film is aided by an amazing performance by the lead actor Josef Somr (who died last year), perhaps more famous for his turn in Jiri Menzel's "Closely Watched Trains" (Oscar winning film for Best Foreign Language film). The film belongs to Kundera, Somr and Jires, in that order.
In the early 1950s, Josef Somr was a university student and a member of the Communist Party. Then he was denounced by another student for being a pessimist and a Trotskyite. He was expelled from the Party and University and sentenced to a work brigade that nearly broke him. Now he lives somewhere, but is visiting his old town, seeking revenge. He finds that things have changed, but he has not. He tries to get his vengeance by sleeping with his accuser's wife, but nothing he does seems to have any effect.
It's a sad movie, with a strong subtext about the futility of vengeance, that occasionally breaks surface, along with a strong religious sense. It's also a bit of a diagetic musical picture, with modern march tunes which praise the workers and their allies, alternating with old folk tunes closer to the characters' hearts. It's a late entry in the Czech Spring movement that somehow escaped the censors.
It's a sad movie, with a strong subtext about the futility of vengeance, that occasionally breaks surface, along with a strong religious sense. It's also a bit of a diagetic musical picture, with modern march tunes which praise the workers and their allies, alternating with old folk tunes closer to the characters' hearts. It's a late entry in the Czech Spring movement that somehow escaped the censors.
This film, one of the most celebrated of the Czech New Wave, is often commended as a bravely anti-communist work. I do not agree with that assessment.
This film was produced by a state-run, Party controlled studio. It attracted a great audience to the state-run cinemas of the time. While it certainly details the injustices and abuses of the Stalinist era in the Eastern Bloc countries of the late '40s and early '50s, its most sympathetically portrayed character is not the once-purged-now- successful revenge-bent scientist at the center of the narrative. Rather, the most impressive character we see is the main character's rival and target: a once proud idealist who danced seductively to the traditionalist folk-hymns embraced during the enactment of Czeck socialism, and who partook in the Stalinist committees popular at the time, he now teaches Marxism to the sex-and-drugs celebrating children of the late '60s and embraces their cultural revolution.
The cynical "protagonist" knows only anger over past wrongs, which is to say resentment. The commie true-believer moves forward with history and its evolving paradigms of love and joy. I would define this film as a Nietzschean, rather than as an anti-Marxist (or Marxist) work.
This film was produced by a state-run, Party controlled studio. It attracted a great audience to the state-run cinemas of the time. While it certainly details the injustices and abuses of the Stalinist era in the Eastern Bloc countries of the late '40s and early '50s, its most sympathetically portrayed character is not the once-purged-now- successful revenge-bent scientist at the center of the narrative. Rather, the most impressive character we see is the main character's rival and target: a once proud idealist who danced seductively to the traditionalist folk-hymns embraced during the enactment of Czeck socialism, and who partook in the Stalinist committees popular at the time, he now teaches Marxism to the sex-and-drugs celebrating children of the late '60s and embraces their cultural revolution.
The cynical "protagonist" knows only anger over past wrongs, which is to say resentment. The commie true-believer moves forward with history and its evolving paradigms of love and joy. I would define this film as a Nietzschean, rather than as an anti-Marxist (or Marxist) work.
A movie adaptation that succeeds by remaining true to the novel's theme while telling the story with an exciting new structure and style. As opposed to the novel's use of more conventional flashback passages, in the film the past seems to attack Ludvik Jahn -- played brilliantly by Josef Somr of CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS -- from all sides, as the past echoes inescapably through the world of the present. It also doesn't hurt, I suppose, that Kundera himself co-wrote the screenplay.
"Optimism is the opiate of mankind. A 'refreshing spirit' stinks of stupidity. Long live Trotsky! Yours, Ludvik". With this sarcasm, Ludvik (Josef Somr) has insulted his lover, a loyal Communist, who brings this blasphemy to the attention of the Party. In a public vote, he is unanimously condemned, expelled from the Party, the University and required to serve under harsh conditions in the military for six years. In mass egalitarian states, leadership is impelled to guarantee happiness and his "joke" is seen as a serious attack on what is nowadays called "The Politics of Joy." We see the Czechs celebrating their glorious government building a glorious future, while Josef Somr, projects cynicism and detachment skillfully, as he plots revenge. Milan Kundera's novel was a surprising and popular revelation from behind the "Iron Curtain," making this adaptation inevitable.
Did you know
- TriviaLenka Termerová's debut.
- Quotes
Ludvík Jahn: It's an odd thing: when you feel hatred for a woman, you suddenly begin to observe her as intently as if you loved her.
- ConnectionsEdited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)
- How long is The Joke?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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