搜索"Frantisek" ,找到 部影视作品

冬天的小苍蝇
剧情:
冬天,警察局里,警察正在审问十四岁的玛拉。被捕时,他开着一辆偷来的奥迪跑到离家很远的地方。他和性格古怪的希都斯出发去寒冷的南方平原探险,但他讲述起来轻描淡写,又绝口不提任何细节,让人觉得疑点重重。随着情节的展开,发生或消失的每一件事都衍生出各种各样的可能性。影片也是关于在冬日里依旧顽强地嗡嗡叫的小苍蝇,讲述了男孩子们之间的友谊纽带以及无法克制的冒险欲望——即便根本不知道会经历什么,人们依旧会上路。
美丽的图画
导演:
剧情:
[Twoprettygirlscomeofageandapainterhasanunusualcommission.Inarepressiveclimatesexualexplorationrepressionandliberationareandrepresented.]
大街上的商店
剧情:
1942年,沦陷的斯洛伐克某小镇上,德国人正在主持修建庞大的木制纪念碑,但当地木匠托尼(Jozef Króner 饰)对此并不关心,妻子的唠叨已经让他足够烦恼。托尼的妹妹嫁给军官后生活大有改观,托尼也借妹夫的权利,获赠一纸批文,得到了大街边一家犹太商店的所有权。店主是一位78岁的犹太寡妇劳特曼(Ida Kaminska 饰),耳聋眼花,托尼与她夹缠不清之际始发现这家商店徒有空壳,早已没有多少货物,然而照顾劳特曼可以得到犹太组织的酬劳,托尼于是瞒着妻子在店中帮工,对外却宣称自己是店长。不久,德国人开始把犹太人收押后运往集中营,托尼想要藏起劳特曼,但心中经历着巨大的煎熬。商店外,犹太人在纪念碑下集中出发,商店内,托尼面对不明所以的老妇借酒浇愁……  本片获1966年奥斯卡最佳外语片奖。
创造奇迹的女人
剧情:
A group of Czech artists choose to ignore the realities of Nazi occupation in this brooding experimental war drama. When a pretty female refugee comes to town seeking help, she awakens the sexual desires of all the men, but the only one who helps her is a sympathetic sculptor. When she is allegedly killed, the man sends the artists who refused to aid the woman death masks of the victim. All later conclude that the woman was not mortal.
星辰公主[电影解说]
剧情:
尽管老国王对他的四个孩子不满意,但现在已是公主们准备结婚和王子准备登基的时候。国王出发去打鸟,并将王国托付给维伦王子。他的姐妹们希望他为她们提供新郎。美丽的女孩晚星出现在维伦面前,维伦立刻爱上了她。晚星也喜欢维伦,因此,为了一个吻,她帮助他的姐妹们嫁给了她的兄弟月光、阳光和风。国王回家后找不到女儿们,因为新郎们已经把她们带走。愤怒的国王指派维伦王子带她们回家。
骄傲的公主[电影解说]
导演:
剧情:
影片描写半夜国国王昏庸,权臣当道。美丽而骄傲的公主,在和平国国王的帮助下,恢复了温厚善良的本性,并且制服了权臣。从此他们幸福愉快地和劳动人民生活在一起。  (.我国有“中央电影局东北电影制片厂1954年译制”版本. )
好兵帅克
剧情:
帅克从外表上看去胖乎乎的,有点傻里傻气,实际上他性情憨厚、心地善良耿直、喜欢直话直说。在第一次世界大战期间,帅克自告奋勇去从军,但又被认为是装疯卖傻。由于偶然的机会,他成为了奥匈帝国军队神甫的传令员,不久又被神甫因赌博输给了卢卡什中尉,成为了中尉的传令员。帅克成天为卢卡什中尉玩弄妇女跑前跑后的服务。他还为了讨卢卡什中尉的喜欢,稀里糊涂的把将军的狗偷回来了,因而引起了将军的勃然大怒,闯下了大祸。结果帅克和卢卡什一起被调往前线。在火车上他又再次惹怒了将军。又错拉了火车停车信号器,被列车员罚款,拉下去见站长,结果因为没带证件被德军抓进司令部,等他出来,火车已经开走,他只好徒步去追赶部队。
魔鬼的陷阱
剧情:
In the time of Counter-Reformation, a miller and his son come under investigation by a priest of the Inquisition, when rumors spread that their prosperity comes from working with the Devil.  The Devil's Trap is a film directed by František Vláil, based on a novel by Alfréd Technik, adapted by František A. Dvorák and Miloš Kratochvíl. It was the first of three historical dramas that Vláil made during the Czech New Wave (technically he isn't really a part of the New Wave, however these films were made during the same era of artistic freedom), preceding his more well known Marketa Lazarová (1967) and Valley of the Bees (1968).  Set in the late 16th Century during the Catholic Reformation, in the Moravian Karst, situated in what is now the Eastern Czech Republic, it tells the tale of a miller (Vítezslav Vejrazka), and his son Jan (Vít Olmer), who come under suspicion and are investigated by a Jesuit priest of the Inquisition (Miroslav Macháchek), when rumors of witchcraft are spread by the local regent (Cestmír Randa), who is jealous of the miller's prosperity and degree of respect among the local populace.  As expected from Vláil, this film is a stunning experience all the way through. From the opening shot, an ominous manipulation of perspective with a close up of a mangled figure of Christ dominating the foreground against a tiny figure in black walking along the horizon, to the breathtaking confrontational finale inside the vast stalactite filled Karst caverns, it is a wonderful display of visual mastery.  Maybe not quite as impressive as Marketa Lazarová, but still full of astonishing imagery. As seen from unique angles and distinct points of view which highlight the director's remarkable sense of awareness of framing, motion, and positioning on the emotional and dramatic tone of the scene. The most memorable being a repeated shot where the camera is suspended and launched with speed through the air towards the miller's door.  The story here is a simple one and I would say more accessible than his later works. With a conventional structure emphasized as much by its plot and characters, than by its expressionistic cinematography or authentic historical detail. The events play out without much surprise, and there is a strong underlying, almost supernatural, mysterious aspect that is left unresolved, in fact barely explored, which is slightly disappointing, but only because it's so fascinating that I wish there was more.  Acting is great all around. Particularly the villains Miroslav Macháchek as the priest, casting a sinister and imposing shadow wherever he goes, and Cestmír Randa as the weasel like regent behind all the persecution. While Vít Olmer brings a charismatic leading man presence in his role as the miller's son Jan, in love with the lovely orphan girl Martina (Karla Chadimová), who becomes a dangerous object of rivalry between Jan and other young men of the village.  The film also features the evocative music of Zdenk Liška (perhaps the most prolific composer of the Czech New Wave). In this his second of eleven collaborations with Vláil, his compositions are used sparingly, but to great effect, complimenting but never overpowering a scene. The best example of which can be heard in an amazingly shot celebration and dance sequence at the end of the second act.  The Devil's Trap might not be a masterpiece, but it is still a strong effort, with a fascinating straightforward story and a glorious historical setting captured beautifully by Vláil's unmistakable visual prowess. A fine work that would also be the perfect starter plate to prepare yourself for the challenging feast of Marketa Lazarová or The Valley of the Bees. It even has an easy to digest running time. It's therefore puzzling why this gem remains largely overlooked and ignored.