| Ivan
Barnev, Oldrich Kaiser , Julia Jentsch , Martin Huba, Marian Labuda,
Zuzana Fialova.
Despite the 1997 death
of longtime friend and Closely
Watched Trains collaborator Bohumil Hrabal, 1960s-era Czech
New Wave filmmaker Jiri Menzel enters into a post-mortem collaboration
with the famed author in this pitch black comedy detailing the shrewd
rise of an ambitious waiter. All diminutive manservant Jan Dite
(Ivan Barnev) ever wanted was to be filthy rich and to preside over
his very own hotel. As a young man coming of age in the 1930s, Jan
was preoccupied by beautiful women and awe-stricken by the fact
that anyone, be they rich or poor, would bend to their knees to
pick up a coin. With World War II fast approaching and the Germans
steadily taking occupation of Czech territory, the opportunistic
servant begins his rapid ascent up the hospitality ladder by working
for a number of high-profile figures. Though Jan was never a man
to settle down with just one woman, his growing attraction to Aryan
beauty Liza (Julia Jentsch) soon found the aspiring hotelier proposing
marriage. Of course a blueblood Teuton like Liza could never wed
a man unable to provide proof of his German heritage, but that doesn't
stop Jan from doing his best to please her in the bedroom. Later,
when Liza is killed retrieving a box of valuable stamps acquired
during her stint at the Russian front, Jan uses the valuable collectors
items to purchase the very hotel in which he used to work. Unfortunately
for Jan good luck is always followed by bad news, and it's not long
before his life's ambition comes crumbling down all around him. |