A survey of Central and Eastern European cinema
Thursday November 21st 2024

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‘Short Films’ Archives

The Banner of Youth

The Banner of Youth

Sztandar Młodych. Poland, 1957, tinted monochrome, 3 mins.  A three-minute advertisement for the Polish Communist daily youth newspaper Sztandar Młodych ('Banner of Youth'), this is a more or less exact equivalent of the films that Len Lye made for the GPO Film Unit in Britain twenty years earlier. Lye's A Colour Box (1935) was an [...]

In the Time of King Krakus

In the Time of King Krakus

Za króla Krakusa.  Poland, 1947, black and white, 14 mins.  One of the peculiarities of Polish film hisory is the almost perfect separation between the pre-1939 and post-1945 eras, for reasons that the dates themselves spell out all too clearly. Many Polish filmmakers didn't survive World War II, while others chose not to [...]

Punitive Expedition

Punitive Expedition

Büntetőexpedició Hungary, 1970, black and white, 34 mins.   Is there another national film culture that has devoted so much screen time to the study of horses? Not merely in the sense of lots of them on screen at any one time (there are plenty of American-made Westerns that offer much in that department), but in the way that many [...]

Capriccio

Capriccio

Hungary, 1969, colour, 16 mins.   Ostensibly a non-narrative study of various aspects of a rural winter, this short film by one of modern Hungarian cinema's greatest visual poets has all the spellbinding qualities of his better-known feature debut Sindbad (Szindbád, 1971), but here allied to a winning sense of humour that's never quite [...]

Swimming-Pools

Swimming-Pools

Strand Hungary, 1963, black and white, 14 minsNot so much a documentary as an often near-abstract study of bodies on beaches, much of István Ventilla's film uses extreme telephoto foreshortening to reduce people to constituent parts. Flesh is contrasted with sand, stone and grass, and with other examples: hairy and smooth legs almost seem to be [...]

Gypsies

Gypsies

Cigányok Hungary, 1962, black and white, 17 mins If the IMDB is to be believed, this short documentary made for the renowned Béla Balázs Studio is the directorial debut of Sándor Sára, who went on to forge a distinguished career as both director of his own films and cinematographer of other people's, notably Ten Thousand Suns (Tízezer nap, [...]

You…

You…

Te Hungary, 1962, black and white, 10 minsOne of the first films by one of Hungary's greatest contemporary directors, You... is a delightful jeu d'ésprit with a distinctly French nouvelle vague flavour: in particular, it's strongly reminiscent of Jean-Luc Godard's Une Femme Mariée (1964), though Szabó's film was made a couple of years earlier. [...]

43.3km Transylvanian Timber

43.3km Transylvanian Timber

My second review for the London International Documentary Festival website is of Georg Tiller and Claudio Pfeifer's almost wordless Austrian meditation about two very diverse professions - logging and border patrolling - operating in the same remote valley in Romania, inaccessible except by narrow-gauge railway. Much of it played out to me like [...]

Teethful Smile

Teethful Smile

Uśmiech zębiczny 1957, black and white, 2 minsHalf a minute longer than his first completed film Murder (Morderstwo, also 1957), Teethful Smile (also known as Teeth Smile and Toothy Smile) is a more complex piece of work, though it's based on a similar concept of exploring voyeuristic impulses. Here, though, there's a voyeur onscreen as well [...]

Murder

Murder

Morderstwo Poland, 1957, black and white, 1 minSome artists find their characteristic themes and approaches some distance into their career, while others emerge seemingly fully formed. Roman Polański so unambiguously falls into the latter group that the authorship of his first batch of Łódź Film School shorts (literally the first films he [...]

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