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A comedy by eminent Czech director Věra Chytilová satirizing nouveaux riches who have acquired their wealth through post-Velvet Revolution property restitution. A simple villager named Bohuš inherits a fortune FROM his father but unfortunately trades common sense for the power of money. In the end, the likable hero, played by popular comedian Boleslav Polívka, loses it all - property, friends, and love - thanks to his blindness. (official distributor synopsis)

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Stanislaus 

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English I've been putting off the cult classic The Inheritance for a very long time, and since it's one of the most quoted Czech comedies, the film didn't have much to surprise me anymore. The script by Věra Chytilová and Bolek Polívka is full of memorable gems, no doubt about it, but on the other hand there are some pretty futile parts with a supremely awkward touch, especially in the first third of the film. The Inheritance would certainly not be what it is if it wasn’t for Polívka in the lead role, who managed to portray the drunken and boorish Bohuš in a very convincing way – quite possibly he didn't even have to act much and was just being himself. Besides him, there the film features other memorable characters: the mini-aunt, Bohuš's mates, his two "femme fatales" Irenka and Vlastička. In the end, I found the film incredibly absurd – imaginative, yes – but somewhat bizarre and out of step with the overall concept. I can definitely understand any rating for The Inheritance. I liked the film as a humorous probe into the lives of the village hicks who are confronted with the seductions of the material world, but I was also tempted to turn the film off several times just because of these overly boorish characters. ()

Zíza 

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English I don't know, I was never entertained or captivated. I just kind of "missed it". I don't need this movie to live, I even breathe better when I don't have to say the title... They just had a certain lack of appeal for each other, and it's certain we'll never get past it. I don't mind, and I'm sure the movie doesn't either. And just to clarify a bit how much I dislike the movie (in case anyone cares), if I had to choose between it and, say, Pokémon, I choose you, Pikachu, you cute electric rat from Japan.... ()

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kaylin 

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English Even though it may seem like a film mainly about humor and pranks at first glance, after years one realizes that it is a very good social critique, which is usually laughed at by those who are criticized because they probably don't even understand it. Bolek Polívka is truly incredible in his role, and Chytilová holds the directorial reins so firmly that it's unbelievable. Every scene has a sense of the overall impression. ()

Marigold 

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English That's weird, but it's the best in the "capitalist-privatization comedy" genre. Chytilová may have lost her mind and taste in the 1990s, but Bolek Polívka in the role of Bohuš has proper style and persuasiveness, as does his redneck group (especially the unique grandfather Kroner). Irene doesn't deny that she's not an actress, but fuck, but that's what The Inheritance is all about. It's definitely not a good film, but with hindsight it has its charm and undeniable truthfulness. Chytilová does know how to do that. It's a testament to a certain time with all the smudges and flaws in beauty, but it is watchable... And those catchphrases are also worth storing in memory, although some dialogues are really... redneck. ()

D.Moore 

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English One of the best so-called post-revolutionary Czech films. Like The Firemen's Ball, I had to laugh at The Inheritance from beginning to end. I laughingly resist thinking for two hours about how timely and, yes, harshly true this film is. Each of us knows someone like Bohuš... And many people often are him. ()

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