2010
Four Velvet Men Then and Now (1/4) Michael Kocáb
Portraits of four people filmed in the course of twenty turbulent years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Then
Michael Kocáb, in 1989 a rock musician, founder of the Bridges initiative which endeavoured to enable dialogue between dissent and the Communist authority of the time
And now
Michael Kocáb - rock star, deputy, businessman, musician and minister, father of three children. Gifted and competent player.
In 1989, the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia brought the four heroes of the film to the limelight. Since then, the camera has followed them as they pass through unexpected stages in their post-revolutionary lives. Their personal and family dramas intertwined with their public and political engagements offer a colorfoul picture of the last twenty years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Director Pavel Koutecký worked on the film from 1990 till 2006. There are five documentaries from this period (After a year, 1990, After a Year and After Another, 1991, After Years, 1994, After Yeras II, 1997, The Solid Point Seekers – A Dozen Years for the Stars of November, 2001. Jan Šikl has been filming since 2008.
The filming was governed by two principles: an open attitude towards everything which fate lays in the hands of the “heroes”, and the filmmakers’ approach – beginning with the selection of the questions and ending with the choice of the film’s means of expression. Above all, however, the filmmakers place emphasis on the paradoxical nature of human existence, the balance between the humorous and the serious, the deliberate exclusion of explicit testimonies of so-called important themes, on playfulness and joy of the picturesque; the project also shows a clear attempt to find authentic essential feelings below the surface, behind the exhibition presented for the camera. The directors use animation in the film which gives it another dimension and dynamism.
The film was made with the financial support of the State fund of the Czech Republic for the support and development of Czech cinematography.
Director: | Pavel Koutecký, Jan Šikl |
Cinematography: | Stano Slušný, Vlastimil Hamerník, Martin Řezníček, Jan Šikl |
Sound: | Vladimír Chrastil |
Music: | Jan Šikl ml. |
Editing: | Martin Steklý |
Dramaturgy: | Hana Jemelíková |
Running time: | 56 min |
Year of production: | 2010 |
Watch the film | |
Michael Kocáb (1/4) |
© Film & Sociology, Czech Television
Four Velvet Men Then and Now (2/4) Martin Mejstřík
Portraits of four people filmed in the course of twenty turbulent years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Then
Martin Mejstřík, in 1989 editor-in-chief of a non-conformist student magazine and one of the leaders of the students’ strike
And now
Martin Mejstřík - student, journalist, gardener, housekeeper, senator, father of three children.... He is waiting where the God will send him.
In 1989, the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia brought the four heroes of the film to the limelight. Since then, the camera has followed them as they pass through unexpected stages in their post-revolutionary lives. Their personal and family dramas intertwined with their public and political engagements offer a colorfoul picture of the last twenty years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Director Pavel Koutecký worked on the film from 1990 till 2006. There are five documentaries from this period (After a year, 1990, After a Year and After Another, 1991, After Years, 1994, After Yeras II, 1997, The Solid Point Seekers – A Dozen Years for the Stars of November, 2001. Jan Šikl has been filming since 2008.
The filming was governed by two principles: an open attitude towards everything which fate lays in the hands of the “heroes”, and the filmmakers’ approach – beginning with the selection of the questions and ending with the choice of the film’s means of expression. Above all, however, the filmmakers place emphasis on the paradoxical nature of human existence, the balance between the humorous and the serious, the deliberate exclusion of explicit testimonies of so-called important themes, on playfulness and joy of the picturesque; the project also shows a clear attempt to find authentic essential feelings below the surface, behind the exhibition presented for the camera. The directors use animation in the film which gives it another dimension and dynamism.
The film was made with the financial support of the State fund of the Czech Republic for the support and development of Czech cinematography.
Director: | Pavel Koutecký, Jan Šikl |
Cinematography: | Stano Slušný, Vlastimil Hamerník, Martin Řezníček, Jan Šikl |
Sound: | Vladimír Chrastil |
Music: | Jan Šikl ml. |
Editing: | Martin Steklý |
Dramaturgy: | Hana Jemelíková |
Running time: | 56 min |
Year of production: | 2010 |
Watch the film | |
Martin Mejstřík (2/4) |
© Film & Sociology, Czech Television
Four Velvet Men Then and Now (3/4) Jan Ruml
Portraits of four people filmed in the course of twenty turbulent years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Then
Jan Ruml, in 1989 a dissident and press spokesman for the Civic Forum movement
And now
Jan Ruml – dissident, Minister of the Interior, party leader, manager, lawyer…, meritorious demonstrator, who planted trees.
In 1989, the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia brought the four heroes of the film to the limelight. Since then, the camera has followed them as they pass through unexpected stages in their post-revolutionary lives. Their personal and family dramas intertwined with their public and political engagements offer a colorfoul picture of the last twenty years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Director Pavel Koutecký worked on the film from 1990 till 2006. There are five documentaries from this period (After a year, 1990, After a Year and After Another, 1991, After Years, 1994, After Yeras II, 1997, The Solid Point Seekers – A Dozen Years for the Stars of November, 2001. Jan Šikl has been filming since 2008.
The filming was governed by two principles: an open attitude towards everything which fate lays in the hands of the “heroes”, and the filmmakers’ approach – beginning with the selection of the questions and ending with the choice of the film’s means of expression. Above all, however, the filmmakers place emphasis on the paradoxical nature of human existence, the balance between the humorous and the serious, the deliberate exclusion of explicit testimonies of so-called important themes, on playfulness and joy of the picturesque; the project also shows a clear attempt to find authentic essential feelings below the surface, behind the exhibition presented for the camera. The directors use animation in the film which gives it another dimension and dynamism.
The film was made with the financial support of the State fund of the Czech Republic for the support and development of Czech cinematography.
Director: | Pavel Koutecký, Jan Šikl |
Cinematography: | Stano Slušný, Vlastimil Hamerník, Martin Řezníček, Jan Šikl |
Sound: | Vladimír Chrastil |
Music: | Jan Šikl ml. |
Editing: | Martin Steklý |
Dramaturgy: | Hana Jemelíková |
Running time: | 56 min |
Year of production: | 2010 |
Watch the film | |
Jan Ruml (3/4) |
© Film & Sociology, Czech Television
Four Velvet Men Then and Now (4/4) Kryštof Rímský
Portraits of four people filmed in the course of twenty turbulent years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Then
Kryštof Rímský, in 1989 a secondary-school pupil and the youngest witness of the brutal police incursion on Národní třída
And now
Kryštof Rímský – student, anarchist, junkie, father. Openhearted rebel.
In 1989, the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia brought the four heroes of the film to the limelight. Since then, the camera has followed them as they pass through unexpected stages in their post-revolutionary lives. Their personal and family dramas intertwined with their public and political engagements offer a colorfoul picture of the last twenty years in the post-communist Czech Republic.
Director Pavel Koutecký worked on the film from 1990 till 2006. There are five documentaries from this period (After a year, 1990, After a Year and After Another, 1991, After Years, 1994, After Yeras II, 1997, The Solid Point Seekers – A Dozen Years for the Stars of November, 2001. Jan Šikl has been filming since 2008.
The filming was governed by two principles: an open attitude towards everything which fate lays in the hands of the “heroes”, and the filmmakers’ approach – beginning with the selection of the questions and ending with the choice of the film’s means of expression. Above all, however, the filmmakers place emphasis on the paradoxical nature of human existence, the balance between the humorous and the serious, the deliberate exclusion of explicit testimonies of so-called important themes, on playfulness and joy of the picturesque; the project also shows a clear attempt to find authentic essential feelings below the surface, behind the exhibition presented for the camera. The directors use animation in the film which gives it another dimension and dynamism.
The film was made with the financial support of the State fund of the Czech Republic for the support and development of Czech cinematography.
Director: | Pavel Koutecký, Jan Šikl |
Cinematography: | Stano Slušný, Vlastimil Hamerník, Martin Řezníček, Jan Šikl |
Sound: | Vladimír Chrastil |
Music: | Jan Šikl ml. |
Editing: | Martin Steklý |
Dramaturgy: | Hana Jemelíková |
Running time: | 56 min |
Year of production: | 2010 |
Watch the film | |
Kryštof Rímský (4/4) |
© Film & Sociology, Czech Television