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A proud diminutive man in a penguin suit with a comically large lace of distinction across his chest makes up this eye-catching poster for Jirí Menzel's I Served the King of England |
A small man in Prague, Jan Dite, wants more than anything to become a millionaire and through his work as a servant, - and his marriage to the German Liza, - he achieves just this.
I Served the King of England is written and directed by Jirí Menzel (Closely Watched Trains/Ostrzhe sledované vlaky (1966)), adapting the same-titled 1973 novel by Bohumil Hrabal (Closely Watched Trains/Ostře sledované vlaky (1965)). The title is a literal translation of the original Czech title.
Here's a cheerful, playful and infectious tale. Oldrich Kaiser (Na vode (2016, TV-series)) as the old version of Dite doesn't look at all like Ivan Barnev (Blessed Are the Meek (2020)) as the younger version, and the man's childlike evasion of negative consequences of his actions in life are perhaps a bit overly conspicuous.
But I Served the King of England has funny scenes (among others some with the boss, played by Marián Labuda (Destová víla (2010))), lovely women and highly esteemed images (cinematography by Jaromír Sofr (S certy nejsou zerty (1985))). The film is a humanistic portrayal of courage, love, sex and the changing times.
Watch a trailer for the film here
Cost: 3.2 mil. $
Box office: 7.3 mil. $
= Minor flop (returned 2.28 times its cost)
[Donsajni
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