This new volume in the "Twenty-Four Frames" series focuses on
twenty-four key Czech, Slovak, Hungarian, and Polish films from the
twenties to the present. Between the wars the cinemas of Hungary,
Poland, and the former Czechoslovakia each claimed their pioneers
of early cinema and attained significant levels of production. They
first attracted international attention in the 1930s, confirming
this status with a succession of politically and aesthetically
challenging films from the 1950s to the present. The work of
directors such as Andrzej Wajda, Mikl's Jancs?, Jir? Menzel, Istv?n
Szab?, M?rta M?sz?ros, Krzysztof Kieslowski, Jan Avankmajer, and
B?la Tarr are discussed. There are in depth studies of films such
as Ashes and Diamonds, The Round-Up, The Shop on Main Street,
Closely Watched Trains, Alice, The Decalogue, and Satantango.
General
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