A survey of Central and Eastern European cinema
Sunday May 5th 2024

Archives

Posts Tagged ‘István Szabó’

Sweet Emma, Dear Böbe

Sweet Emma, Dear Böbe

Édes Emma, drága Böbe Hungary, 1992, colour, 81 mins.  István Szabó’s return to his native Hungary after over a decade of international acclaim produced a film that’s a stark contrast not only to the glossy, star-studded production values of Mephisto (1981), Colonel Redl (1985), Hanussen (1988) and Meeting Venus (1991), but [...]

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. [...]

Censorship as a Creative Force: Screentalk

Last night I attended the keenly-awaited Censorship as a Creative Force Screentalk discussion at London's Barbican Arts Centre, in which Jiří Menzel, István Szabó and Agnieszka Holland (an eleventh-hour replacement for Andrzej Wajda) discussed their experience of censorship under the various totalitarian régimes under which they had to spend [...]

Censorship as a Creative Force

In late April, the Barbican Arts Centre in London is hosting a week-long season, Censorship as a Creative Force, in collaboration with the Polish Cultural Institute, the Czech Centre and the Hungarian Cultural Centre.I've already booked tickets for the two highlights - a panel discussion on April 25 with the extraordinarily impressive line-up of [...]