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Tri muzi ve snehu (1936) Online

Tri muzi ve snehu (1936) Online
Original Title :
Tri muzi ve snehu
Genre :
Movie / Comedy
Year :
1936
Directror :
Vladimír Slavínský
Cast :
Hugo Haas,Vera Ferbasová,Jindrich Plachta
Writer :
Erich Kästner,Vladimír Slavínský
Type :
Movie
Rating :
7.2/10
Tri muzi ve snehu (1936) Online

Credited cast:
Hugo Haas Hugo Haas - Továrník Eduard Bárta
Vera Ferbasová Vera Ferbasová - Vera Bártová
Jindrich Plachta Jindrich Plachta - Jan Náprstek
Zdenka Baldová Zdenka Baldová - Julie Hubácková
Vladimír Borský Vladimír Borský - Dr. obch. véd. Jaroslav Hájek
Ella Nollová Ella Nollová - Jeho matka
Frantisek Paul Frantisek Paul - Reditel hotelu (as Franta Paul)
Theodor Pistek Theodor Pistek - Vrátný v Imperialu
Míla Reymonová Míla Reymonová - Pani Kasperová
Vlasta Hrubá Vlasta Hrubá - Paní Severová
Jaroslav Marvan Jaroslav Marvan - Director of Barta's Works
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Alfred Bastýr Alfred Bastýr
Julius Batha Julius Batha
Frantisek Cerný Frantisek Cerný
Jan Cerný Jan Cerný


User reviews

Aurizar

Aurizar

Three men of different ages meet and socialize at a ski resort. Each is a misfit of some kind -- a physician with no money, a very wealthy man who has no privacy because his name is always recognized and strangers ask for money, a man who's lost the love of his life and sees no future. The snow, beautiful and eternal, provide a landscape of loss in which these three wander until each rediscovers his best self in the others.

This 1936 movie was made in Czechoslovakia. By this time the author of the book upon which it is based, Eric Kaestner, had become suspect in his native Germany. Kaestner later became famous in the U.S. because of the movie "The Parent Trap" which was based on his story, "Die Doppelte Lottchen," and because his "Emil und die Detective" was acknowledged as generating a sub-genre of child detective stories here, in both print and film. Kaestner was interrogated several times by Nazi authorities, 1936-1945, and his books were publicly denounced as being "antagonistic to the German spirit." He was never imprisoned, only marginalized as a creative artist. He was likewise spurned by politicians during the Adenauer regime, from 1949 into the 1960s. Adenauer may have still been miffed by Kaestner's well-known dismissal of the integrity of the Weimar Republic, in which he (Adenauer) served: "A democratically-elected government funded by capitalist cash boxes, and defended by an army composed of displaced aristocrats commanding the unemployable and outcast."

The three men in the story, and film, embody the unemployable and outcast. Despite their sense of persecution they do not submit to isolation with good grace -- each demonstrates a capacity for creativity. Their relationship is based on good humor and keen observation of their surroundings. The characters speak in Czech, but German subtitles were added in some markets.