Jan Palach

Trailer
Czech Republic / Slovakia, 2018, 124 min (Alternative: 119 min)

Directed by:

Robert Sedláček

Screenplay:

Eva Kantůrková

Cinematography:

Jan Šuster

Composer:

Michal Rataj

Cast:

Viktor Zavadil, Zuzana Bydžovská, Denisa Barešová, Kristína Kanátová, Jan Vondráček, Karel Jirák, Michal Balcar, Anna Stropnická, Gabriel Cohen (more)
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On 16 January 1969, to protest against the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia, he poured flammable liquid on himself and set himself on fire. Three days later he succumbed to the heavy burns. He wanted to alarm the subdued nation and wake it up from lethargy. All he became was its bad conscience. The tragic story of a sensitive young man was filmed by Robert Sedláček. (Summer Film School)

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Reviews (6)

D.Moore 

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English I liked a number of Czech Century episodes more than Jan Palach. And yet it's a good film, but it didn't surprise me at all, and never once affected me as strongly as Burning Bush. First of all, I would expect it to be a bolder spectacle - that the creators won't be afraid to speculate a little and come up with a new Palach motif (or at least indicate it). Unfortunately, that didn't happen. I also didn't like all the cheap-looking "clues" like the lighter, the burning leaflets or the burning Hardy, and I'm not completely satisfied with the love triangle, which didn't need to be there at all, or at least should have had a proper ending. ()

dubinak 

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English Jan Palach is a rather strong topic for a film adaptation, and for quite some time during the screening, I had the feeling that it would be handled probably above average. The performances were top-notch, and I was pleased with the set design, costumes, and camera work. However, what I criticize is that the internal mentality of Jan Palach was not portrayed and outlined well enough for us, and it somehow felt to me like there were a few scenes missing before the fateful act. Some scenes, on the other hand, seemed unnecessary and disjointed to me. The screenplay simply had several holes that could not be patched up throughout. I was disappointed that it wasn't clearly shown when the main character broke and how he actually decided to do it. So, technically, I have no complaints, but the depiction of such an important and iconic figure in Czech history significantly lagged behind. Seen as part of the echoes of the Febio Fest in the university hall of Pardubice. ()

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claudel 

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English I didn't like that movie purely subjectively too much, or rather, it didn't manage to captivate me throughout, draw me into the story, the familiar story was portrayed boringly, it didn't have the right spark. I intentionally write subjectively, because I was annoyed by things that may not annoy other viewers at all - the main actor, in my opinion, overrated Zuzana Bydžovská, she is a good actress, but to be so praised and nominated for every bark for any award, it offends me. So why am I giving it four stars? For courage, because a Czech director finally found who wasn't afraid and went into this difficult topic and conceived it as he did, someone may like it, someone not, but he tried and that's the main thing! ()

NinadeL 

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English Sedláček tries to fill in what was seemingly missing in Burning Bush. However, the random images from Jan Palach's life fail to offer even a hypothesis, let alone a concrete answer to the basic question of why it happened to him. Personally, I would rather like to see films about other torchbearers, for example, Ryszard Siwiec. ()

Malarkey 

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English If Jan Palach for me, as a Czech, weren’t a subject so close to my heart, I would have given this film three stars. I believe that Mr. Sedláček was so precise that as far as the plot of the film is concerned, everything is based on facts that he’d gathered from all available sources, including the Palach family. However, at times I got lost in certain moments that did not make much sense to me in the context of the whole movie. Why did he drown the puppy in that ditch? Why was the mistress there? These are the moments that don’t add much to the story and Palach’s character, because they don’t get explained and it’s rather annoying. However, the director portrayed the environment, time, and atmosphere very faithfully here. The final scene, which the viewer is waiting the whole movie for, then came across as relatively brief and quickly done and over with, but I guess there’s nothing more to add in this case… Jan Palach is undoubtedly an interesting movie. There are many hidden thoughts and the movie depicts a time I would never want to experience. I’m aware that the communists have always been swine, but when I see on television like this, it makes me sick. I do not understand who, after all that, entitles today’s communists to take part in the current political scene in our country… ()

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