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December 2nd, 2008
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Out of the woodsA young Czech director unveils a gripping first filmBy Steffen Silvis Staff Writer, The Prague Post August 30th, 2006 issue
In the middle of a bleak winter wood stands a desolate farmhouse where a father and son are just managing to survive. No words pass between them as they go about their daily chores: the father ritually chopping wood to ensure a continuing fuel supply, the son picking through the dreary woods to various points where he has set leg-traps to catch their supper. Throughout these silent routines, rounds of bullets are heard being fired in the distance while fighter jets occasionally scream overhead. The father and son are obviously carrying on as best they can in the middle of a war zone. The war will never be named nor will the combatant sides be identified, though the action is obviously placed somewhere in a corner of Eastern Europe that has turned deadly. When the son returns to a clearing in the woods where he has set a trap for a deer, he finds instead an unconscious woman whose leg has been snared in the trap's jaws. She's dressed in the fatigues of a soldier and is carrying a small pouch filled with documents marked "secret." The son carries the woman back to the farmhouse to care for her out of a sense of guilt for having set the trap. His father angrily opposes having the woman in the house not so much because it involves them in the fighting's intrigue, but he senses that she will upset the delicate, if grim, balance that exists between the two men. What follows is a domestic psychological drama played out before a backdrop of chaos and bloodshed. Fresh from FAMU, first-time director Marta Nováková has been getting a lot of attention for her film Marta, and justly so. She's a director who knows how to create and maintain a tone and mood. The brooding, near-monochromatic atmosphere and blasted landscape she's conjured for the film is as haunting as the faces of her three principal actors.
There are many Tarkovskian overtones to Marta, which only means that as a young filmmaker Nováková is studying the great rather than the commercially successful (it does feel at times as if we've entered the "Zone" in Stalker). Her film is as encouraging a debut as Julius S Nováková's three leads are excellent. Petra S Fans of Czech cinema may also detect the influence of another war film that throws a woman and two men together to survive the madness surrounding them as best they can: 1966's Koc As luck would have it, both films will be shown together at Sve 13) with English subtitles that will allow a larger audience to compare the work of a master and his student. Until then, Marta opens with English titles this week at the same cinema, offering cineastes an opportunity to catch a first glimpse of a rising Czech director. Steffen Silvis can be reached at ssilvis@praguepost.com Other articles in Night & Day (30/08/2006): Browse the Current Issue
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