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Kolya

original movie poster
Directed by Jan Svěrák
Produced by Eric Abraham
Jan Svěrák
Written by Zdeněk Svěrák
Starring Zdeněk Svěrák
Andrei Chalimon
Libuše Šafránková
Music by Ondřej Soukup
Bedřich Smetana
Cinematography Vladimír Smutný
Editing by Alois Fišárek
Distributed by Space Films
Release date(s) France May, 1996 (premiere at Cannes)
Czech Republic 15 May 1996
United States 24 January 1997
Australia 3 April 1997
United Kingdom 9 May 1997
Running time 105 min.
Language Czech, Slovak and Russian

Kolya (originally Kolja) is a 1996 Czech film drama about a man whose life is reshaped in an unexpected way. The film was directed by Jan Svěrák and stars his father Zdeněk Svěrák who also wrote the script from a story by Pavel Taussig.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The film begins in 1988 while the Soviet bloc is beginning to disintegrate. František Louka, a middle-aged Czech man dedicated to bachelorhood and the pursuit of women, is a concert cellist struggling to eke out a living by playing funerals at the Prague crematorium. He has lost his previous job at the philharmonic orchestra due to having been half-accidentally blacklisted as "politically unreliable" by the authorities. A friend offers him a chance to earn a great deal of money through a sham marriage to a Russian woman to enable her to stay in Czechoslovakia. However, the woman uses her Czechoslovak citizenship to emigrate and join her boyfriend in West Germany.

Due to a concurrence of circumstances she has to leave behind her Russian-speaking five-year-old son, Kolya, for the disgruntled Czech musician to look after. At first Louka and Kolya have communication difficulties, as they don't speak each other's languages and the many false friend words that exist in Czech and Russian add to the confusion. Gradually, though, a bond forms between Louka and Kolya. The child suffers from suspected Meningitis and has to be placed on a course of carefully monitored Antibiotics. Louka is threatened with imprisonment for his suspect marriage and the child may be placed in a Russian children's home. The Velvet Revolution intervenes though, and Kolya is reunited with his mother. Louka and Kolya say their goodbyes.

[edit] Principal cast

Role Actor
Kolya Andrei Chalimon
Louka Zdeněk Svěrák
Klára Libuše Šafránková
Mr. Brož Ondřej Vetchý
Louka's mother Stella Zázvorková

[edit] Awards

[edit] External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Antonia's Line
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
1996
Succeeded by
Character
Preceded by
Les Misérables
Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film
1997
Succeeded by
Ma vie en rose



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