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Up and Down (2005)
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Reviews Counted:64
Fresh:54
Rotten:10
Average Rating:7.2/10
Consensus: A tragi-comic exploration of the universal search for stability in post-Communist Prague.
Runtime: 1 hr 53 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Synopsis: Director Jan Hrebejk (DIVIDED WE FALL) once again delivers a perfectly-balanced dark comedy, a satire addressing the fragile state of the contemporary Czech Republic, as well as the foibles of the... Director Jan Hrebejk (DIVIDED WE FALL) once again delivers a perfectly-balanced dark comedy, a satire addressing the fragile state of the contemporary Czech Republic, as well as the foibles of the more or less damaged characters who populate the film, all of whom are in search of redemption. Unfolding in three loosely-connected storylines, the film opens with a pair of petty criminals smuggling Indians across the Czech border. After making their delivery, they discover a baby that has been left behind, and take it directly to the pawn shop. Everything has its price it seems, and Miluska (Natasa Burger), a barren housewife who wants nothing more than a baby, buys the Indian boy with her life savings. Her husband, Franta (Jiri Machacek), a soccer hooligan turned law enforcer, is less than pleased with the baby's brown skin color, but slowly warms to him, eventually facing off with his racist drinking buddies. In a third story, a college professor (Jan Triska) finds out he has cancer and reconnects with his estranged son, Martin (Petr Forman, son of legendary director Milos Forman), who has lived in New Zealand for the past 20 years. It's a difficult reunion, as Martin comes home to find his father living with his old girlfriend, meets a sister he never knew he had, and encounters his near-unrecognizable mother. The film weaves together a strikingly rich number of themes in its material, encompassing racism, economic disparity, familial relations, crime, and immigration problems, and gives them a sympathetic, humanistic treatment. [More]
Starring: Petr Forman, Emília Vásáryová, Jan Tríska
Starring: Petr Forman, Emília Vásáryová, Jan Tríska
Director: Jan Hrebejk
Director: Jan Hrebejk
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Up and Down
Lacks objective throughout but its essence is both moody and bittersweet.
When you understand its message, the film takes on a different level.
Its many ideas never quite cohere, and it remains an admirable misfire...
An accomplished film that uses dark humor to leaven its serious topics.
(Hrebejk) understands (his characters) on an intrinsic level, & sees their lives as the story of his country in the infancy of the 21st Century & the infancy of its democracy.
It manages the neat trick of being both charming and bilious, and its tart points about racism translate excellently into English.
Weaves the politics of borders into the comedy of human frailty...seasoned with the everyday absurdities of artificial social boundaries.
Hrebejk and his screenwriter, Petr Jarchovsky, understand their characters too well to judge them.
From what Hrebejk appears to say, it looks like the Czech Republic has many of the same problems as reunited Germany, but his comic roundabout approach diffuses his statement
Even with the humor, this is more of a downer than an upbeat story, an interesting slice of life, but doesn't have an arc to the story or the characters.
It's at least grappling with the kind of big, explosive questions that most filmmakers assiduously avoid.
Hrebejk deftly brings the stories together, and does so without delving into sentimentality.
Lacks any formulas or solutions, and is content to show us its complicated characters, their tangled lives, and the way that our need to love and be loved can lead us in opposite directions.
While the drama is rife with conflict, it's also keenly funny at times.
Casting a wide net while remaining thematically coherent, Hrebejk's film remains clear-eyed and satisfyingly complex right to the bitter end.
Pungent and spirited, Up and Down shows us a nation in transition that's not necessarily a nice place to live, but it's certainly worth a visit. Especially at the movies.
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