How can you be so open-minded?

Alta 2022-04-22 07:01:49

Once again, I want to reiterate my identity as a fan of Eastern European cinema.

The great wisdom of director Menzel, we have seen it in ten minutes of old age. The old man who has read the wind and frost, his tolerance for life encounters and gratitude for life make many directors over 50 years old seem like little children.

As the best in Eastern European cinema (the other one I think is Soviet-Russian cinema), Czech cinema has a natural nobility in it. This kind of temperament is only revealed by never complaining, never being vicious, never giving up, never doubting... Czechs, on the other hand, generally have more sense of humor than Russians. (With the exception of Ryazanov, of course, hahahaha, right? Comrade Nava Selitsev?)

I'm constantly fascinated by a trait common to Czech directors: the majesty of the imagination, starting with Yang's "Green School Tree"... …When they tell their stories, they are completely unfettered, and the real and the unreal are freely intertwined, catering to the expectations of the audience without showing any traces. This is in line with the characteristics of human memory. You close your eyes and think about the fragments of your life. There are slow motions, high-profile pictures, soundtracks, and voiceovers... The farther away, the more rendered by yourself. Those who take this seriously are good directors.

This film can basically be regarded as a memoir, the Czech history reflected by a person's life, the Nazi era and the socialist era are the two major focuses. The protagonist's cunning and sneering make him an outsider who tells the story. It is obviously a plot that revolves around him, but he always seems to have nothing to do with him. Where the fun style lies.

It's very nice, and it's inevitable that there will be spoilers if I analyze it again, so I'll stop there for now. Everyone remembers that you must receive it when you see it.

Finally, I saw a piece of Taiwan news related to this film, which is included here. Chinese people are the same wherever they go. Humor is not a good



photo . The sticker covers the three-point



"medal" to cover the important parts



According to the United News Network, before the Czech art film "I Served the King of England" (I Served the King of England) was released in Taiwan, the stills of naked women were banned from public posting outside the theaters by the News Bureau. The businessman had an idea and urgently produced hundreds of medal-shaped stickers, which were quickly delivered to various film theater dealers, so as to cover the important parts of the female body in the stills.

Haipeng Company, the film distributor that distributed the "I" film, said that the information bureau stipulates that posters or stills that are publicly posted outside the theater are not allowed to expose the body, even if it is not exposed at three points. For example, in Cai Mingliang's "A Cloud in the Sky" poster, the actor Li Kangsheng's buttocks must be covered with special treatment before it can be posted publicly. Therefore, the stills of the "I" film with naked female bodies can not be an exception.

The film "I" won the International Film Critics Association Award at this year's Berlin International Film Festival. The plot describes that a waiter in Prague, Czech Republic, obeyed the teachings of his master who had served the British royal family, and took the hope of serving the British king as the highest ideal, causing a series of crazy encounters.

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Extended Reading

Obsluhoval jsem anglického krále quotes

  • Jan Díte, older: A person becomes most human, often against his own will, when he begins to founder, when he is derailed and deprived of order.