Mág | |
---|---|
Directed by | František Vláčil |
Written by | Václav Nývlt |
Starring | Jiří Schwarz |
Cinematography | Jiří Macák, Jan Hanzal |
Music by | Jiří F. Svoboda |
Production company | |
Release date | March 1988 |
Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | Czechoslovakia |
Language | Czech |
Mág (Magician) is a 1988 Czech film directed by František Vláčil. The film is about Czech poet Karel Hynek Mácha. It is Vláčil's last film.[1][2] The film received mixed reviews and critics called it a reflection of Vláčil's previous work.[3][4]
Plot
Mácha goes to Litoměřice where he accepted position as a Notary. He plans to marry Lori who is getting prepared for the wedding. Mácha's brother Michal comes instead of him and announces that Mácha is dead. The film then switches to when Mácha and Lori met. Maácha and Lori met in Kajetán's theatre. The film shows Mácha's and Lori's relationship. It also shows Mácha's meeting with ill girl Márinka who is a fan of his poems. Mácha also hears that someone called Hynek killed his father in jealousy. It inspires Mácha to make his most famous poem, Máj. When Máj is released it is received negatively and Mácha needs to provide Lori who is pregnant and accepts position as a Notary in Litoměřice. He spends his free time at Rádobyce. One day there is a fire and Mácha helps but his organism succumbs illness and he dies.
Cast
- Jiří Schwarz as Karel Hynek Mácha
- Veronika Žilková as Lori Šomková
- Věra Tichánková as Lori's mother
- Blažena Holišová as Mácha's mother
- Jan Hrušínský as Mácha's brother Michal
- Marta Vančurová as Márinka
- Zdeněk Řehoř as Márinka's father
- Václav Knop as Josef Kajetán Tyl
- Jana Švandová as Leni Forchheimová
- Tomáš Juřička as Jan Kaška
- Alexej Okuněv as Karel Sabina
- Jan Kraus as Trojan
References
- ↑ "Mág recenze DVD (Bonton)". www.nostalghia.cz. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ↑ "Mág. (1987)". Filmový přehled (in Czech). Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ↑ "Mág (1987)". Czech and Slovak Film Database. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ↑ "František Vláčil – 25fps". 25fps.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 23 September 2017.
External links