home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!udel!gatech!europa.asd.contel.com!paladin.american.edu!auvm!GWUVM.BITNET!AGNEWHL
- Message-ID: <MIDEUR-L%92123113510587@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.mideur-l
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 13:33:32 EDT
- Sender: Discussion of Middle Europe topics <MIDEUR-L@UBVM.BITNET>
- From: Hugh Agnew <AGNEWHL@GWUVM.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Books and Films Suggestions
- In-Reply-To: Message of Thu,
- 31 Dec 1992 12:19:57 CST from <RICHIMW@NSCVM1.NETWORK.COM>
- Lines: 37
-
- OK, this is about films and books, of course it's a very personal,
- idiosyncratic, and probably prejudiced list, but I'm not impressed with
- what Marcie got so far, so here goes:
-
- For books, meaning novels? or literature as opposed to scholarship?
-
- If literature, I think the one book that does more than any other to give
- a feel for the fate of East Central Europe (at least, Czechoslovakia)
- in the 20th C is Josef Skvorecky's _The Engineer of Human Souls_ (if you read
- only one Skvorecky, this is the one it should be, podle meho, szerintem, etc.).
- Moreso than the Kunderas even though they're better-known.
-
- If this starts something, I'll try to suggest a few others (Danilo Kis?
- Gyorgy Konrad? Peter Eszterhazy is unfortunately little translated).
-
- For films: Not "Closely Watched Trains," but Forman's "Firemens' Ball" gives
- the flavor of "really existing socialism", Czech-style. For surrealistic
- parable, try Nemec's "Report on the Party and the Guests", with its unforget-
- table ending. From Hungary, "Time Stands Still" depicts the framework of
- post-1956 life out of which the FIDESZ generation emerges; films by Istvan
- Szabo (25 Firemens' Street, Love Story) also rehearse much of twentieth
- century history and culture in his own way. Relatively popular among inter-
- national audiences (I saw it at the first Singapore International Film
- Festival) was Gyongyossy and Kabay's "Job's Revolt" -- not a typical Magyar
- film, much more straitforward and, yes, sentimenal; but effective in the end.
- Karoly Makk's "Love" is also a wonderful film. For Polish cinema, I think
- Andrzej Wajda is unavoidable, and of his films the one which is most complete
- is "Man of Marble". His other well-known ones, from the earlier period
- including "Kanal" and "Ashes and Diamonds" are also great. Feliks Falk's
- "Top Dog" is a terrific view of Poland in the Gierek-boom-era years.
-
- This is necessarily incomplete and ignores cinema from Slovakia, the former
- Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, etc. But it's a start, and, it seems, more
- than Marcie got up to now. What do the others think for their favorites?
-
- Hugh Agnew
- AGNEWHL@GWUVM.BITNET
-