Term
|
Definition
-Karel Zeman -Inspirace -1949 Loutkovy Film -inspired by a bet about the impossibility of animating glass figurines (accomplished by re-meltings to re-position) -inspiration for visuals from Walt Disney's Fantasia "Waltz of the Flowers" sequence -story of a glass artist imagining his creation's adventures in a water droplet |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Karel Zeman -Vynalez Zkazy/The Fabulous World of Jules Verne -1958 (Ceskoslovenský Státní Film) –based on the Jules Verne novel Face au Drapeau/Facing the Flag (1896) -a combination of live-action with special effects stop motion -use of miniature models in a fish tank for undersea scenes, forced perspective camera angles to enlarge objects; studio sets with lines to resemble 19th-century book engravings; actors also moved in stylized ways to resemble poses in illustrated novels; black and white photography to further reinforce this effect, story a composite of several Jules Verne novels including 20,000 Leagues under the Sea |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Hermina Tyrlova -Ferda Mravenec/Ferda the Ant (1941, Bata Studios) -based on Ondrej Sekora’s popular children’s book and comic strip character, the Czech (and to a lesser extent) European equivalent of Mickey Mouse (popular in the 1930s-1950s, revived 1980s and again in the 2010s) -stories center on co-operation between Ferda and his friends to achieve a goal; the first story – Ferda the Ant – paralleled Sekora’s difficulties at the time (his and his wife’s imprisonment by the Nazis) -first use of wire-frame puppets in Czech animation, similar to Jiri Trnka made her puppets herself, with knowledge from her father (a maker of wooden figurines) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Jiri Trnka -“Ruka/The Hand” (1965, Kratky Film, Prague) –use of hand and wood puppet animation; wooden puppets fabricated by Trnka; regards puppets as similar to sculptures; therefore face does not change; lighting; body attitude; and motion convey emotion; personal film – an allegory from his script |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Bretislav Pojar -“Balablok” (1972, National Film Board, Canada) –use of cut paper animation with geometric characters (abstraction characteristic of NFB)(departure from the media – from puppet to cut paper and from the style – from vaguely medieval or Renaissance style to abstract modern – and from the tone – from serious to humorous – of his Czech animations |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Jan Svankmajer -“Dialog vecny/Eternal Conversation” “Moznosti Dialogue/Dimensions of Dialogue” (Kratky Film, 1983) –among first films after his seven-year ban (due to disagreement of Communist censors with the content and aesthetics of his earlier animations) -use of object animation to reference his concepts of animism (all objects effectively embody/contain a spirit) and of decay (the progressive disintegration of the individual objects in the heads into clay); the concept of the standardization resulting from dialogues (with each of the remaining heads identical) -reference in the visual design to Czech Mannerist artist Arcimboldo |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Vlasta Pospisilova -“Az opada listi z dubu/When the Leaves Fall from the Oak” segment (1991) for Fimfarum (2003)(Kratky Film)(Fimfarum – MAUR Film, Ceska Televize) –basis in the Jan Werich young adult & adult fairy tales book Fimfarum -popular in Czechoslovakia -anti-substance abuse theme (here alcohol); deal-with-the devil story (with a happy ending, with the devil tricked by a contract with a specific clause -the soul can be taken when the leaves fall from the oak – presumably the autumn – but oaks do not loose there leaves in Czechoslovakia) -whimsical style for the figures & backgrounds |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Jiri Barta -Krysar/The Pied Piper (1986, Kratky Film) -basis in Victor Dyk’s Krysar (1911-1912), a re-telling of “The Pied Piper” legend with an emphasis on the love between the Piper & a young woman -author Czech nationalist before WWI, in opposition to the Austro-Hungarian Empire its imposition of German culture & language on Czech writers & artists -use of German Expressionist style and German Renaissance medium (wood) for puppets -derivation of backgrounds & lighting with their skewed angles & dark shadows from German Expressionist films, especially The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Vaclav Svankmajer -“Svetlonos/The Torchbearer”(2005, Bionaut Films, FAMU) -an allegorical story about a hero who re-starts the cycle of night and day by fighting his way through a maze (against living female statues) to assume a throne (and his death, his blood animates a heart) -story intended to have similarities both to video games (with a constant conflict against obstacles to reach a goal) and also heroic myths (e.g. Hercules, Theseus) -5 years of production in father’s studio (Athanor) and released to acclaim, with subsequent absence from animation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Aurel Klimt -Laika (2017, Studio Zvon) 6-year production with small (4-6 animator) staff in his studio, small budget 2,000,000 approximately from the Czech government -2,000,000 for post-production from Kickstarter; re-imagining of the story of Laika, the first animal in space (launched by the Russians, acclaimed a hero, actually never returned to earth and survived only briefly in space (the true history only revealed after the collapse of Communism) -here Laika and animal astronauts from other countries crash land on a planet with aliens and establish a peaceful co-existence with them -this idyll is disturbed by the advent (through crash landing ) of a Russian cosmonaut and an American cowboy astronaut -both attempt to establish control over the land and to exploit its resources -the aliens and the earth animals eventually vanquish both; due to its criticism of Russian and American imperialism it did not gain an international audience -however, its message is more applicable to the Eastern & Western European countries formerly in the U.S. or Soviet blocks |
|
|