Konec básníků v Čechách
Directed byDušan Klein
Written by
  • Dušan Klein
  • Ladislav Pecháček
Screenplay by
  • Dušan Klein
  • Ladislav Pecháček
Produced byDaniela Stašková
Starring
CinematographyJosef Vaniš
Edited byJiří Brožek
Music byZdeněk Rytíř
Distributed byHeureka Production
Release date
  • 22 July 1993 (1993-07-22)
Running time
115 minutes
CountryCzech Republic
LanguageCzech

Konec básníků v Čechách is a 1993 Czech comedy film directed by Dušan Klein and written by Klein with Ladislav Pecháček.[1] The fourth installment in the "Poets hexalogy", the title is preceded by How the World Is Losing Poets (1982), How Poets Are Losing Their Illusions (1985), and How Poets Are Enjoying Their Lives (1988), and followed by Jak básníci neztrácejí naději (2004) and Jak básníci čekají na zázrak (2016).[2] The film stars Pavel Kříž, David Matásek, Tereza Brodská, and Míla Myslíková. Set to a backdrop of the turbulent social changes after the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, the story focuses on Štěpán's struggle to adapt to new conditions brought about by the introduction of capitalism to the nation.

Synopsis

A few years after the Velvet Revolution, much has changed in Štěpán's life, as well as in his country. His best friend, Kendy, who now works as a reporter and advertising director, records an interview with Štěpán, which leads to the doctor's expulsion from the hospital where he works. He returns to his native Hradiště, where things have also changed. His mother still works as a seamstress, and she tries to find a job and partner for her divorced, unemployed, and disillusioned son. While hunting for jobs, several of which he rejects on moral grounds, Štěpán meets the sensitive and principled pharmacist Ute. In the end, Štěpán accepts work in a monastery, where nuns take care of mentally disabled children.

Cast and characters

References

  1. "Konec básníků v Čechách..." filmovyprehled.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  2. "Život je kompromis – básnická hexalogie" [Life Is a Compromise – Poets Hexalogy]. filmovyprehled.cz (in Czech). 13 April 2016. Retrieved 16 January 2022.


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