His Jurko the Brigand ( Zbojník Jurko, 1976) is a peculiar telling of the legend of the well-known Slovak brigand Juro Jánošík and The Bloody Lady ( Krvavá pani, 1980) was in turn inspired by the legend of the Bloody Lady of Čachtice – Countess Elizabeth Báthory. The Slovak Film Institute also issued on DVD two full-length animated films made by the prominent personality of Slovak cinema, Viktor Kubal. Both DVDs contain French and English menus and subtitles. In addition to French actors, Juraj Kukura and Jarmila Koleničová also play in the film. This film again is about pretending, playing, spinning yarns and merging the border between imagination and reality. Igor Luther was the cinematographer of the film Robbe-Grillet collaborated with him also on the second co-production project Eden and After ( L’éden et après/ Eden a potom, 1970). However, Slovak actors such as Zuzana Kocúriková and Ivan Mistrík star alongside Trintignant. The first was made in 1968 and the famous French actor Jean-Louis Trintignant played the title role of a foreigner through whom the director develops mystifying games. He made The Man Who Lies ( L’homme qui ment/ Muž, ktorý luže) and Eden and After in French-Slovak co-productions. This double DVD contains full-length feature films made by the French screenwriter and director Alain Robbe-Grillet. The DVD contains an English menu and subtitles in several languages, including English. The DVD bonuses include Hanák’s extraordinary short films Old Shatterhand Came to See Us ( Prišiel k nám Old Shatterhand), Artists ( Artisti), Learning ( Učenie), The Mass ( Omša), A Day of Joy ( Deň radosti). They had both humour and universal humanity,” said the director in an interview for Film.sk. They lived on the margins of civilisation, sometimes excluded from the village community, and their wisdom was related to their inner strength and positive thinking. “I admired those old people for a number of reasons. Hanák visited remote corners of the country in order to uncover the inner beauty of old people and sensitively read their “stories” from their faces and hands. It was made by director Dušan Hanák, inspired by the photographic series created by Martin Martinček. One of the finest films of Slovak cinematography – the documentary Pictures of the Old World ( Obrazy starého sveta) was made in 1972. Again, an English menu and subtitles are available. Zachar) or Birdies, Orphans and Fools ( Vtáčkovia, siroty a blázni, dir. Uher), A Pact with the Devil ( Zmluva s diablom, dir. Barabáš), The Wonder-Maid ( Panna zázračnica, dir. Solan), The Bells Toll for the Barefooted ( Zvony pre bosých, dir. Hanák), Before Tonight Is Over ( Kým sa skončí táto noc, dir. Jakubisko), Celebration in the Botanical Garden ( Slávnosť v botanickej záhrade, dir. Krivánek), The Prime of Life ( Kristove roky, dir. Grečner), Our Daily Day… ( Deň náš každodenný…, dir. Uher), Dragon’s Return ( Drak sa vracia, dir. Uher), The Boxer and Death ( Boxer a smrť, dir. Barabáš), The Sun in a Net ( Slnko v sieti, dir. Bielik), The Song of the Grey Pigeon ( Pieseň o sivom holubovi, dir. the following titles: Jánošík ( Jánošík, dir. In addition to a later documentary November 1989 As Seen by Slovak Documakers ( November 1989 očami slovenských dokumentaristov), the collection contains e.g. There are a total of 21 DVDs in two special packs. This collection of films focuses on the 1960s. The DVD contains an English menu and subtitles. Ján Lacko’s comedy Luck Will Come on Sunday ( Šťastie príde v nedeľu) and the musical comedy by Josef Mach Native Land ( Rodná zem) complete the collection. Peter’s Umbrella/ Dáždnik svätého Petra, in collaboration with director Frigyes Bán) and Ján Kadár ( Cathy/ Katka), who later won an Academy Award for The Shop on Main Street ( Obchod na korze) made in collaboration with Elmar Klos. The collection also includes full-length feature débuts by directors Peter Solan and František Žáček ( The Devil Never Sleeps/ Čert nespí), Jozef Medveď ( The Quadrille/ Štvorylka), Vladislav Pavlovič ( St. Bielik also participated in the making of Beware ( Varúj…!) where he also starred in the title role. Director Paľo Bielik is prominently represented in this collection – Wolves’ Lairs ( Vlčie diery), Forty-Four Mutineers ( Štyridsaťštyri) and Captain Dabač ( Kapitán Dabač). The Slovak Film Institute, in association with Petit Press, has issued a collection of ten Slovak films made in the 1940s and 1950s. Pokračovanie obsahu: Slovak Film of the 1940s and 1950s
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