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2008 | 15 | 3-4 | 575-606

Article title

Filmy smíchu a zapomnění. Obraz „pražského jara“ v českém hraném filmu z období „normalizace“

Authors

Title variants

EN
Films of Laughter and Forgetting: The ‘Prague Spring’ in Czech Film during the ‘Normalization’ Period

Languages of publication

CS

Abstracts

EN
In this article the author explores the ways in which the events of the ‘Prague Spring’ are depicted in feature films made in Czechoslovakia during the ‘Normalization’ period. These films were made both on the instructions of top-ranking members of the Czechoslovak Communist Party and at the initiative of the film-makers themselves. The author focuses on three films by Karel Steklý (1903–1987), Hroch (Hippopotamus, 1973), Za volantem nepřítel (The Enemy behind the Wheel, 1974), Tam kde hnízdí čápi (Where the Storks Nest, 1975), a fi lm by Vojtěch Trapl (1917–1998), Tobě hrana zvonit nebude (It Won’t Toll for You, My Friend, 1975), and a film by Václav Vorlíček, Bouřlivé víno (Riotous Wine, 1976). The author also provides information about the careers of Steklý and Trapl. The films depict the events of 1968 in Czechoslovakia according to the official interpretation set out in the ideological brochure Poučení z krizového vývoje ve straně a společnosti po XIII. sjezdu KSČ (Lessons from the Crisis in the Party and Society after the 13th Czechoslovak Communist Party Congress), published in 1970. In keeping with the line laid down in this publication, the attempted reform of the Communist régime is described as a failed ‘counter-revolutionary putsch’, the aim of which was to re-establish capitalism and the ‘bourgeoisie’. The chief proponents of the Prague Spring are portrayed here as intriguers, liars, and swindlers, their sympathizers as criminal elements, who aggressively attack orthodox Communists and opponents of reform. The critics of the Prague Spring, on the other hand, are depicted as honourable, industrious, modest people, who, because of their opinions, became the victims of physical and verbal attacks. The advocates of reform are even construed to be people responsible for acts of repression in the 1950s, radical extremists who did nothing but damage the idea of Communism. These films were meant, among other things, to justify and ‘explain’ the mass expulsions from the Communist Party and the judicial prosecution of opponents of the ‘Normalization’ régime. None of them, however, depicts the armies of intervention – most end before the troops arrive, or are set afterwards and return to 1968 in flashbacks. In terms of genre, three of the five films considered here can legitimately be called political dramas, though there is also burlesque (in Hroch ) and comedy (in Bouřlivé víno ). Though awarded prizes by the régime, the films were not particularly well received by the public, and were, with the exception of Bouřlivé víno , poorly attended.

Keywords

Discipline

Year

Volume

15

Issue

3-4

Pages

575-606

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • Soudobé dějiny, redakce, Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR, v.v.i., Vlašská 9, 118 40 Praha 1, Czech Republic

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-05d78e2b-761d-4c75-b79b-a800740967a7
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