Pouta, Kuky se vrací, and the other winners of the 2011 Ceský lev (Czech Lion) Awards have been announced. The 18th Annual Ceský lev (Czech Lion) Awards “are annual awards that recognize accomplishments in filmmaking and television. It is the highest award of achievement in film awarded in the Czech Republic. The jury is composed of members of the Czech Film and Television Academy (Cfta).” The awards ceremony was held in the Paláce Lucerna in Prague on March 5, 2011. The full listing for the 2011 Ceský lev (Czech Lion) Awards is below.
Best Film
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Vratislav Šlajer
Best Director
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Radim Spacek
Best Screenplay
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Ondrej Štindl
Best Actress
Mamas & Papas, Zuzana Bydžovská
Best Actor
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Ondrej Malý
Best Supporting Actress
Ženy v pokušení (Women in Temptation), Eliška Balzerová
Best Supporting Actor
Kajínek, Vladimír Dlouhý
Best Documentary
Katka, Helena Treštíková
Best...
Best Film
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Vratislav Šlajer
Best Director
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Radim Spacek
Best Screenplay
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Ondrej Štindl
Best Actress
Mamas & Papas, Zuzana Bydžovská
Best Actor
Pouta (Walking Too Fast), Ondrej Malý
Best Supporting Actress
Ženy v pokušení (Women in Temptation), Eliška Balzerová
Best Supporting Actor
Kajínek, Vladimír Dlouhý
Best Documentary
Katka, Helena Treštíková
Best...
- 3/6/2011
- by filmbook
- Film-Book
If ever two things went together like they were made for each other it's classic crime noir set behind the Iron Curtain, the murky morality and bubbling conspiracies making the era absolutely perfect for the genre.
Enter Czech film maker Radim Spacek and his upcoming Walking Too Fast (Pouta). A battered Ondrej Maly stars as a police inspector teetering on to the wrong side of the law ...
Czechoslovakia, 1982. The totalitarian regime seems interminable and imperishable. Antonín, a member of the secret police, uneasy, tyrannical, perhaps even psychopathic, is percolating with unvoiced anger and desperation. Bored with everything, he aims his demons at a seemingly clear but in fact unattainable target - a young woman named Klára. It is not love, not passion but a burning desire for the illusion of escape from the clutches of drabness and boredom. Antonín's absurd attempt to win Klára over pits him against not only...
Enter Czech film maker Radim Spacek and his upcoming Walking Too Fast (Pouta). A battered Ondrej Maly stars as a police inspector teetering on to the wrong side of the law ...
Czechoslovakia, 1982. The totalitarian regime seems interminable and imperishable. Antonín, a member of the secret police, uneasy, tyrannical, perhaps even psychopathic, is percolating with unvoiced anger and desperation. Bored with everything, he aims his demons at a seemingly clear but in fact unattainable target - a young woman named Klára. It is not love, not passion but a burning desire for the illusion of escape from the clutches of drabness and boredom. Antonín's absurd attempt to win Klára over pits him against not only...
- 2/10/2010
- Screen Anarchy
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