Finnish Knife

Zdenek Sirový, 1965

Film at Filmový přehled

Summary

Director Zdeněk Sirový made his most important contribution to the Czechoslovak New Wave with the film Smuteční slavnost (Funeral Ceremonies, 1969). As a result, one of his earlier achievements, the intimate psychological drama Finský nůž (The Finnish Knife, 1965), has been somewhat overlooked. The main protagonists are two young men who have become convinced that they have killed someone in a fight that they unfortunately might have provoked. Twenty-year-old Tonda (Karel Meister) and seventeen-year-old Honza (Jaromír Hanzlík) flee from justice even before their guilt for the death has been determined. They make it to Poland but the tension between them mounts and after their return home they part ways... Besides the spectacular chiaroscuro in the camera work of Jan Čuřík, this intimate film offers a convincing testimony of a period wherein young people leading externally untroubled, purposeful lives were typically beset by deep internal fears and uncertainties about their place in life.
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Film data

About a film

Production year 1965
Countries Czechoslovakia
Categories film
Genres psychological
Form feature
Duration 72 min
Director Zdenek Sirový
Cast Karel Meister ml., Jaromír Hanzlík, Karel Engel, Jitka Zelenohorská, František Hanzlík, Jan Schánilec
Director of photography Jan Čuřík
Screenplay Zdenek Sirový, Jan Brandýs, Pavel Juráček
Editor Jan Chaloupek
Production designer Luděk Škuta
Music Wiliam Bukový
Sound designer Adolf Nacházel, Bohumír Brunclík