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Czech Directors
Jiri Menzel
Closely Watched Trains
Interview 1968
Interview 1968 Epilogue
A Track All Its Own
Menzel and Sexuality
Bohumil Hrabal and Menzel
Menzel and the Miracle
Jerusalem Post Review
Los Angeles Times Review
Boston Globe Review
Milos Forman
Black Peter
Forman Passer Papousek
Vera Chytilova
Filmography
Something Different
Daisies
Through Womens Eyes
Interview
Women in Film
21 Deputies Against Daisies
From Vera to the President
First Lady of the New Wave 1
First Lady of the New Wave 2
Film Analyses and History
Subversion in Eastern Europe
Left and Revolutionary Cinema
Women Who Make Movies
History from Women in Film
New Cinema in Czechoslovakia
Part 1
Part 2
The Cinema as Critic
1 Eastern Europe 1955 To 1971
2 Social Criticism
3 Romantic Nationalism
4 The Alienation of Youth
5 Closely Watched Trains
6 The Individual in Czech Film
The Miracle and the Young Wave
1 Sunshine in a Net
2 Preceding Generations
3 Jires
4 Forman Passer Papousek
5 Nemec Juracek Krumbachova
6 Through Womens Eyes
7 Juracek
8 Schorm
9 Masa
10 Menzel
11 Kachyna and Prochazka
12 Bocan
13 Production Groups and FITES
14 Brynych Danek Vlacil
15 Good Entertainment
16 Slovakia in the Sixties
ZBibliography
Bibliography
ZRelated Links
Related Links




Menzel
(By Mira & Antonin J. Liehm - 1977)


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This atmosphere also nourished the distinctive and versatile talent of Jiri Menzel (b. 1938) - actor, stage director, and film-maker. His film career was closely linked with the name of Bohumil Hrabal, from the story "The Death of Mr. Baltisberger" ("Smrt pana Baltazara" - 1965), another of the episodes in "Pearls at the Bottom", through his to-date most successful film, "Closely Watched Trains" ("Ostre sledovane vlaky" - 1966), to the banned "Larks on a String" ("Skrivanci na niti" - 1969). Hrabal's tragicomic everyday absurdity found a congenial poet in Menzel, who viewed life with an attitude of artful irony, and at the same time with an almost philosophical understanding for the tragicomic non-heroes of his films. Menzel proved equally at home making the film version of twentieth-century Czech classic by Vladislav Vancura, the sagely ironic parable of illusion and reality, "Capricious Summer" ("Rozmarne leto" - 1967). On the other hand, the mystery comedies of Josef Skvorecky, "Crime at the Girl's School" ("Zlocin v divci skole" - 1965), and "Crime at the Nightclub" ("Zlocin v santanu" - 1968), were too different in style and too abstractly literary to provide Menzel enough specific human material for his compassionate irony.
(Copyright - The Regents of the University of California)


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