
Ivan Passer
was one of the key authors of the "new wave" of Czech cinema, a group
of young people who forged an energetic and transgressive film movement in the
1960s, breaking away from the precepts of hard socialist realism. Passer was
not only the author of the scenarios of his own films, but he also worked on
the scripts of the first four motion pictures made by his countryman, friend and
colleague Milos Forman: "Konkurs" (1963), "Black Petr" (
1964), "Loves of a Blonde" (1965) and "The Firemen's Ball"
(1967).
The grandson
of a silent movie screenwriter and son of a Jewish couple persecuted by the
Nazis, Ivan was a rebel boy, sent to a boarding school where he became friends
with Milos. Together they went to study cinema at the FAMU film school in
Prague, but young Ivan was eventually expelled from the academy. By then he had
acquired skills in movie-making, some experience and had key friends, such as
cinematographer Miroslav Ondricek. With Forman and other friends, they made
their first movies.
In 1965
Passer made a remarkable first feature, the beautiful "Intimate
Lighting", a film of impressionist inspiration that immediately established
his name as a promising new director. But the social pressures and political
unrest in Czechoslovakia, which culminated in 1968 with the Soviet invasion,
led him into exile the following year. However, in the United States he did not
achieve the notoriety of Forman, who received the best proposals, while he
rejected offers that did not convince him: for example, he refused to make
"Yentl" for a number of reasons, including his conviction that Barbra
Streisand was too old and famous for the role, in opposition to other key
performers as Mandy Patinkin and Amy Irving. Likewise, he refused to make films
with elements of violence, which he always opposed. During World War II he had
been directly exposed to violence, and he believed that it was dangerous to
represent it in films: violence, he said, affects "some people who are not
able to realize the difference between reality and fantasy."
However, he
made some worthy movies, such as his American debut "Born to Win"
(1971), a complex portrait of a heroin-addict hairdresser; his satire on civil
surveillance, "Law and Disorder" (1974); the comedy about
money-laundering bankers "Silver Bears" (1977), and the cult film
"Cutter's Way" (1981), in which a war veteran investigates a crime,
despite he only has one eye, one arm and one leg. For television he directed
the biopic "Stalin" in 1992.
Films :

Written by : Ivan Passer, Jaroslav
Papoušek
Václav Šašek
Cinematography : Josef Střecha,
Miroslav Ondříček
Edited by : Jiřina Lukešová
Production company : Filmové
studio Barrandov
Release date : 8 April 1965
Running time : 71 minutes
Country : Czechoslovakia
Language : Czech
To be continued...