Résumés(1)

One hundred years ago the wicked sorcerer Kruciatus tried to destroy a kingdom now ruled by King Alexander, who has two sons – the heir of the throne Prince Jan and the younger Prince Karel. Not wanting to be second place, Karel sets out to remedy this any cost. With the help of his servant Pakosta, he breaks into the forbidden chamber, acquires some magical items left here from the evil sorcerer, and intends to destroy his brother. Prince Jan thus drinks a magic potion his fine brother serves him and his memory is instantly erased. Prince Jan then sets out on a journey into the Forbidden Forest – a place no one has ever returned from... (Zlín Film Festival)

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Critiques (6)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Ce conte de Noël m’a comblé, notamment grâce à la présence de mes acteurs préférés (Hádek, Josefíková, Hanzlík, Plesl). L’histoire est simple, on ne se prend pas la tête, il y a une dose adéquate d’humour, de suspense et de magie et on peut dire que la Télévision tchèque peut garder la tête haute cette année. ()

Necrotongue 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The story was easy to follow, the acting performances were quite decent, the dragon wasn’t one of the worst and, thankfully, there was no singing. I decided to give it four stars because it was simply hilarious. I absolutely didn't expect there to be so much quality humor. I was chuckling from the very beginning, but the tournament topped it all off (cheerleaders, bracket chart). I was satisfied. ()

Annonces

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Average again, but this time at least a tolerable Christmas fairytale. And this is mainly thanks to the cast (Eva Josefíková as a very beautiful princess, Patrik Děrgel is nice and Kryštof Hádek has decent comedic talent), not thanks to the would-be narrative spectacle, which is harmed by the cheap TV coat, not thanks to the direction by Karel Janák, who again - in vain and unnecessarily - tried to make a great film. ()

3DD!3 

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anglais A fairytale-style Borne Identity or How Dumb and Dumber found happiness. A metaphor on how information is evil and only dumb-asses can find happiness. Patrik Děrgel’s empty expression works for the entire movie (apart from the first moments when he hadn’t yet lost his memory) and Abrhám’s Gandalf was a sure bet. The twist at the end and adding the missing piece to the jigsaw was effective. Excellent for a modern fairytale. I don’t know. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I'm not a big fan of new Czech fairy tales, but this one was entertaining, and my girlfriend and I had a good laugh while watching it. The actors obviously enjoyed it, and Ladislav Mrkvička appeared in a great role. The story was also nice; it surprised me that from this unoriginal premise, they managed to squeeze out a good plot that was enjoyable. ()

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