Directed by:
David OndříčekScreenplay:
Petr ZelenkaCinematography:
Richard ŘeřichaComposer:
Jan P. MuchowCast:
Labina Mitevska, Jitka Schneiderová, Saša Rašilov nejml., Jiří Macháček, Ivan Trojan, Mikuláš Křen, Dana Sedláková, Hana Maciuchová, František Němec (more)Plots(1)
A story about the shifting friendships between a group of twentysomething Prague residents. Hustler Robert earns a living working for a travel agency arranging trips for Japanese tourists. But while trying to win over recent emigre Vesna, he begins to interfere with the love lives of his other friends, upsetting their current relationships and instigating new ones. (official distributor synopsis)
(more)Videos (2)
Reviews (8)
What comes to mind when I think back about Loners? First of all, probably the stoned Machacek, who plays his unbelievable role in a completely believable and natural way, the dishevelled Trojan grasping for his ex-girlfriend Jitka Schneiderová, Němec and Maciuchova having dinner among Japanese tourists, Rašilov and Mitevska waiting for the arrival of a UFO, and all this in such an entertaining and novel package and supported by impeccably selected music that put David Ondříček in a very high position in the hit parade of Czech post-revolutionary films. And it can be much better on the second viewing :-) 4 and 1/2* ()
This is a film that has supposedly become a generational statement. But I must add for myself that it was not communicated to me then or now. The forcibly inserted elements of UFOs, stoners, and the Japanese bring only empty dead ends and once again we are left with the classic "they parted at the beginning and reunited at the end" arc. Where is the added value? I suppose that the young people of that time were not particularly enthusiastic about either the Germans or Maciuchová. So, in summary, the Prague atmosphere and the La Casa blů bar are once again the best things about it for me. ()
It's an artificial product, far removed from what I know from real life, and although I can't exclude that similar types of people exist somewhere, I definitely haven't encountered them. I don't deny the film's entertainment value, although the characters are so "cool" and deliver such unbelievable lines that they are unsympathetic to me. As a generational statement, it doesn't hold up for me at all, but otherwise, Loners is somewhere between two and three stars for me. Overall impression: 45%. ()
One of the best Czech films, which wonderfully explores what a person actually wants to achieve in life. The characters mostly don't know, and if they do, they achieve it in a way that further alienates them. Society's values are changing, and we don't understand them, just as we don't understand what we're actually doing. Funny, but very painful. ()
Petr Zelenka and David Ondříček proved that even here you can build a cult following during the actual premiere, to which a perfect soundtrack from Jan P. Muchow and the gala presentation of the acting trio Jiří Macháček-Ivan Trojan-Saša Rašilov contributed the most. In order for the lines to continue being quoted for two decades from a movie made in the third millennium requires not just luck, but also a bit of talent. ()
Ads