Anybody catch..
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970)
A medieval girl struggles to grow up in a world of eccentrics, monsters and temptation.
Dir: Jaromil Jires Cast: Petr Kopriva , Jaroslava Schallerova , Helena Anyzova .
ARTICLE: http://www.tcm.com/t...s/articles.html
Beautiful but disconcerting film.
Valerie & Week of Wonders
- ziggy6708a
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Re: Valerie & Week of Wonders
It was my pick of the month & I thought it was a great pairing w/Juliet of the Spirits (1965) as both films deal with the idea of a woman finding herself. Here's a bit more info from a favorite blog of mine: http://tinyurl.com/kvhpnqc
Re: Valerie & Week of Wonders
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970), directed by Jaromil Jireš.
I don't often venture into surreal Euro art films, but this Czech title is just too gorgeous to skip. At only 1h17m I can live with the weird-god-help-us plotlessness.
Surreal = "incidents which are dramatically symbolic, but which make little sense in terms of coherent plot".
This is part of a little genre of interesting films: the young girl's coming of age told as horror-fantasy inspired by dark fairy tales. The Company of Wolves (1984) and Pan's Labyrinth (2006) are other examples.
I didn't care to try to puzzle out the story (if there is one) but the imagery and fragments of plot strongly invoke the dream imagery of adolescence, those half-forgotten never-understood years when a new world is revealed, then taken away again.
A major attraction is Jaroslava Schallerová as the title character, her first film at age 13 and just beautiful in every way. I try not to feel too pervy when watching this but a girl's fantasy imagery is just intimate. We have brief nudity and erotica, but she and the film are appealing far beyond that. She is a strong character, coming into her powers.
Criterion Blu-ray with a lovely image.
The disc includes a nice isolated score by The Valerie Project, a US band. Described as "psychedelic folk", a lot of it sounds like art-rock of the early 1970s, say by Pink Floyd or King Crimson. You can listen online at their website.
I don't often venture into surreal Euro art films, but this Czech title is just too gorgeous to skip. At only 1h17m I can live with the weird-god-help-us plotlessness.
Surreal = "incidents which are dramatically symbolic, but which make little sense in terms of coherent plot".
This is part of a little genre of interesting films: the young girl's coming of age told as horror-fantasy inspired by dark fairy tales. The Company of Wolves (1984) and Pan's Labyrinth (2006) are other examples.
I didn't care to try to puzzle out the story (if there is one) but the imagery and fragments of plot strongly invoke the dream imagery of adolescence, those half-forgotten never-understood years when a new world is revealed, then taken away again.
A major attraction is Jaroslava Schallerová as the title character, her first film at age 13 and just beautiful in every way. I try not to feel too pervy when watching this but a girl's fantasy imagery is just intimate. We have brief nudity and erotica, but she and the film are appealing far beyond that. She is a strong character, coming into her powers.
Criterion Blu-ray with a lovely image.
The disc includes a nice isolated score by The Valerie Project, a US band. Described as "psychedelic folk", a lot of it sounds like art-rock of the early 1970s, say by Pink Floyd or King Crimson. You can listen online at their website.
Capsule film reviews: Strange Picture Scroll