Out of the Past 2015 / Obchod na korze / Czechoslovakia 1965
This intimate Oscar-winning drama, shot 50 years ago this year, is set in World War II when Jews were persecuted by the Slovak state. Two of its victims are everyday heroes, even though they stand on opposite sides of the conflict. Through the character of Tono Brtko, the film gains the currency of a timeless statement on the tragic consequences of moral compromise.
It has now been 50 years since the filming of Shop on the High Street, the first Czechoslovak film to win an Academy Award (1966). The passage of time has shown that few such award-winning works can stack up against the artistic quality and emotional power this intimate war drama still evokes today. In 1960s Czechoslovakia it was a pioneering film in several respects: it referenced the brutal persecution of Jews under the Nazis, for the first time it openly acknowledged the active participation of the Slovak state in the Holocaust, and finally it moved beyond the era of formulaic war frescoes centering on a collective hero. Avoiding empty pathos, the fateful tale allows the viewer to feel deep compassion for the elderly and powerless Jewish widow as she is subjected to the Aryanization of her meager business. With the character of everyman Tono Brtko, whose good heart has been infiltrated by fear and a desire for property, the movie shifted towards an ethically compelling and timeless statement on conscience, cowardice, and the tragic consequences of moral compromise.
Zdena Škapová
125 min / Black & white, 35 mm
Director Ján Kadár, Elmar Klos
/ Screenplay Ján Kadár, Elmar Klos podle stejnojmenné novely / based on the novel of the same name by Ladislav Grosman
/ Dir. of Photography Vladimír Novotný
/ Music Zdeněk Liška
/ Editor Jaromír Janáček
/ Art Director Karel Škvor
/ Producer Ladislav Hanuš, Jaroslav Prokop
/ Production Filmové studio Barrandov
/ Cast Ida Kamińska, Jozef Kroner, František Zvarík, Hana Slivková, Elena Zvaríková, Martin Hollý st.
/ Sales Národní filmový archiv
/ Contact Contemporary Films, Ltd.
Czech Ján Kadár (1918–1979), on right, and Slovak Elmar Klos (1910-1993), the long-term directing duo who shot eight features together between 1952 and 1969, are a relative rarity in the world of filmmaking. Their first efforts were marked by period schematism but by the end of the 50s they began positing a more intimate style of narrative marked by a sensitive psychological depiction of character. Their sober realism, emphasizing the credibility of everyday heroes and the situations they live through, reached a climax with the Oscar-winning Shop on the High Street (1965) with its mature sense of tersely dramatic story construction. The events of 1968 intruded on their joint creative career, with Kadár emigrating to Canada and the USA where he shot two more pictures, while at home Klos was forbidden from engaging in any further professional activity.
Contemporary Films, Ltd.
8 Dickenson Rd., N8 9EN, London
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 207 482 6204
E-mail: [email protected]
Národní filmový archiv
Závišova 5, 140 00, Praha 4
Czech Republic
E-mail: [email protected]
Daniel Vadocký
Distributor, Sales Agent
Briana Čechová
Film Institution Rep.
Michal Bregant
Cinema Representative, Distributor, Film Institution Rep.
Barbora Kinkalová
Producer, Service Company Rep.
Andrea Czesaná
Film Institution Rep.
Zuzana Štefunková
Film Institution Rep., Sales Agent
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