Eugene Among Us

  • Czechoslovakia Evžen mezi námi
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Young Eugene from the provinces travels to Prague in order to seek a better life and acquire recognition and fame. Initially he earns a living as a road sweeper; he writes rudimentary poetry and occasionally manages to get himself invited to drunken parties thrown by the Prague boho set. At one such gathering he gets an offer to write engagé pop lyrics expressing loyalty to the governing regime. Gradually the naive yet honourable country dweller becomes a cynical man of means, surrounded by beautiful women. While no-one likes him, everyone’s afraid of him, so he commands respect. The graduation film by Petr Nýdrle was made at Prague’s FAMU, thus outside the realms of official programming. After the success of a private screening held in 1980, the film never made it into distribution (although it was never officially banned), and audiences were only able to see it after November 1989. Thirty years have passed since the filming of this satire criticising the flexible morals of normalisation Czechoslovakia. To this day the black-and-white film appeals for its combination of raw shots and stylised acting performances. (Karlovy Vary International Film Festival)

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Reviews (2)

NinadeL 

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English The best part of it all is the final headline: "In 1980, the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts management promised the filmmakers that it would look for an outlet for the film. After the student strike in November and December 1989, it succeeded." ()

D.Moore 

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English Since it is actually a student film, it is interesting to perceive Eugene Among Us as a testimony to the time in which it was made. But apart from this almost historical-documentary value, a likeable cast of actors in small and even smaller roles, and two really cute scenes (a dialogue between Jan Kraus and Karel Augusta, a reflection on contemporary song lyrics performed by Josef Somr, Jan Kraus and Jiří Bartoška), there's not much worthwhile in it. ()