You can also listen to the review in audio version.
–
The countryside has a changing role in domestic cinematography, but in one way or another it plays our pretty Czech idyll. In the 1950s, the Communists introduced various variations on Stroupežnický. In the 1960s, on the other hand, the new wave found an earthy reality, self-growth and a manifestation of various moral problems, which the whole of Czech society suffers from.
–
In the times of normalization, it was mainly Jiří Menzel’s films that discovered a new harmony in the village’s “earth paradise”, a place of safe escape, which has its ideological and social problems, but humor blooms here, beer is good here and girls are the most beautiful. In short, reality is better tolerated here.
–
In the years following the fall of the Iron Curtain, Czech film was indecisively maneuvered between Menzel’s humanism, careful exaggeration and utter sexlessness. The slush wine kitsch of the Berry trilogy alternated here, satirical pastimes such as Signal and a breath of freshness brought here a naïve theme of escapes from the city and digital nomadism played by Tomáš Vorl and his melancholic Journey from the City.
–