Made In Prague details 21st edition

Highlights include first UK Jan Němec retrospective.

by Amber Wilkinson

The Party And The Guests which was "banned forever" by the Czechoslovak government
The Party And The Guests which was "banned forever" by the Czechoslovak government
The first UK retrospective of Czechoslovak New Wave Jan Němec will be held as part of this year's Made in Prague Film Festival. The festival will screen 11 of his features as shorts as part of its 21st edition, which runs from November 10 to 19.

The Němec retrospective will include two of the best films of the 60s, as voted by the New York Times critics, Diamonds Of The Night and The Party And The Guests, as well as Oratorio for Prague, which offers unique coverage of the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia and is being screened in the UK for the first time. The documentary was intended to be about peaceful demonstrations but his subject changed as Soviet tanks rolled into Prague and the director found himself filming the despair and blood of the people instead, in what is the only filmed footage of the invasion. The festival opens with the UK premiere of The Wolf from Royal Vineyard Street (2016), the final film of Němec's his career in which he reimagines his life, and also features his avant-garde biopic of surrealist artist Toyen.

Given the change in the political situation, Nemec was not allowed to work, his films were banned and he was forced into exile in 1974, only returning after the collapse of the Eastern Bloc.

The festival said: "This retrospective testifies to the bravery and originality of the work of an artist who has never stopped developing his non-conformist vision and constantly challenged the boundaries of artistic freedom and the limits of film as a medium."

An accompanying exhibition of digital black and white photographs from his unfinished film essay What is behind that Wall? introduces Němec as a keen photographer while providing a wider context to his work.

As a contemporary counterpoint to the retrospective the festival also features highlights of Czech Cinema, including an exclusive premiere of the thrilling HBO series Wasteland by Ivan Zacharias; Bohdan Slama's Ice Mother (Czech nominee for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Fiction Film) and The Teacher by Jan Hrebejk.

The festival, which is organised by the Czech Centre in London, is part of a wider celebration of Czech arts, which runs from November 8 to December 6. For dates and times of the films, along with other events, visit the official site.

Share this with others on...
News

Golden boy Krit Komkrichwarakool, Matt Dejanovic and Kenny Brain on Auganic

A collection of moments Mickey Keating on the metaphor and technique behind Invader

Family ties and trauma Laurynas Bareisa on relationship dynamics in award-winning drama Drowning Dry

Looking back RaMell Ross on basketball, filmmaking, overcoming objectification and Nickel Boys

In dialogue with time Bookworm director Ant Timpson on the changing landscape of cinema

Alliance of Women Film Journalists announces EDA Awards The Brutalist named best film

Wicked leads the way in SAG nominations Stars sing their way to success

More news and features

We're currently bringing you reviews from Palm Springs.



Towards the end of 2024, we covered DOC NYC, the French Film Festival UK, Tallinn Black Nights, the Leeds International Film Festival, Abertoir, the London Korean Film Festival, the Belfast Film Festival and Halloween Frightfest.



Read our full for more.


Visit our festivals section.

Interact

More competitions coming soon.


DJDT

Versions

Time

Settings from settings.local

Headers

Request

SQL queries from 1 connection

Templates (11 rendered)

Cache calls from 2 backends

Signals