Zátopek

Előzetes 1
Életrajz / Dráma / Sport
Csehország, 2021, 131 perc (Alternatív 123 perc)

Rendező:

David Ondříček

Operatőr:

Štěpán Kučera

Zeneszerző:

Beata Hlavenková

Szereplők:

Václav Neužil ml., Martha Issová, James Frecheville, Robert Mikluš, Jiří Šimek, Milan Mikulčík, Jaroslav Plesl, Jiří Rendl, Filip Březina, Štěpán Kozub (több)
(további alkotók)

Tartalmak(1)

Autumn 1968. The Australian record holder Ron Clarke arrives in gray Prague. Seeking to overcome the greatest crisis of his career, he has come to get help from his old friend and role model Emil Zátopek, four-time Olympic gold medalist and the most famous Czech athlete of all time – a man who, with impressive nonchalance, pushed the boundaries of human possibilities and took his place alongside other greats who transformed athletic competitions into unforgettable stories. David Ondříček’s fascinating drama about the life of the famous Czech endurance runner – a famous celebrity trying to live a dignified existence in a politically complicated time and also husband of Olympic medalist Dana Zátopková – is as captivating on the field as it is off. (Karlovy Vary International Film Festival)

(több)

Videók (2)

Előzetes 1

Recenziók (4)

D.Moore 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol A running Bohemian Rhapsody and a world-class film that is rarely born in our country, because, like the real Zátopek, this film has a great chance of succeeding in the competition of foreign athletes. Yes, the way Ondříček tells Emil's story is perhaps more playful and, above all, more appealing to the audience than anything unexpected or controversial, but he is able to captivate, entertain and playfully maintain your attention for two hours (hence the introductory comparison to Bohemian Rhapsody). Václav Neužil and Martha Issová are absolutely great, just as the design is beautiful and careful, and Beata Hlavenková's music is, for me, the best domestic soundtrack since Three Brothers by Jaroslav Uhlíř and Michal Novinski. In addition, viewers around the world may receive Zátopek even better than we do, as they will not mind scenes such as the "communists pressure Zátopek because of his wife's origins," which we have already seen because they are in every other film. ()

angel74 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol The editing may look a bit chaotic in places, but otherwise I think this biopic about the Czechoslovak legendary runner is really good. The filmmakers have managed to capture the atmosphere of the time perfectly, and it is not just a sports drama, the political situation of that time also plays an important role. David Ondříček shows the protagonist with all his pros and cons, while also looking into the private life of the Zátopeks. The actors are impeccable and I have absolutely no reservations about them. Václav Neužil Jr. in the title role certainly deserves an accolade, as he perfectly embodied the role of the runner Emil Zátopek. Of course, I must not forget Martha Issová representing Dana Zátopková, she also portrayed her role very believably. (80%) ()

Hirdetés

DaViD´82 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol If you want to follow in Zátopek's footsteps, you’ll have a problem. There is an abundance of it, here and around the world, but most of it can be divided into three categories. Firstly, the celebratory one, where Zátopek is an undisputed legend of the Olympic sport, a pioneer of the drill and a connecting bridge between nations. These are the most common and, in fact, the most rewarding. Then there is the world of Zátopek, the "folksy, bonhomie-spewing storyteller" with all the (half-)truths, myths and stories. There is perhaps no other athlete (at least ours) about whom there are so many famous and well-known stories; and as it happens, some are embellished and others are not, some have a real basis, but different circumstances, and the most unbelievable ones are, you'd be surprised to know, true. Then there is the third, purely "Chekhovian" category of Zátopek: the informer, army officer, communist, poster boy for the system and active secret police collaborator. Ondříček and his team took, or rather "tried to take", the golden middle path "a little of each of those views, but never too much", meaning that it slides on the surface, it's not black and white about a pedestal Zátopek or a despicable communist snitch. But it's not about just Zatopek either, it's about a kind of inaccessible figure about whom we know no more at the end than at the beginning. It's artfully made, but it never breaks out of the plane of "a nice TV movie for a Sunday night with excellent performances". For a film with such global potential, about such a rewardingly ambiguous figure, that's punishingly little. ()

Stanislaus 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Like Julius Ševčík five years ago with Masaryk, David Ondříček managed to make a biopic that would stand up well to comparison with foreign films. From a technical point of view, it is audiovisually well executed and does not look cheap or kitsch. The performances are to be commended, from the seemingly over-the-top Václav Neužil, to the principled Martha Issova, to the thuggish Robert Miklus. There were a couple of scenes that were, ahem, odd, but they get lost (in the crowd) compared to the quality of the rest of the film. The scene with the exhausted marathoner probably got me the most. The poetic and seemingly mismatched vision with the native did have its merit and "charm". ()

Galéria (29)