Surviving Life | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jan Švankmajer |
Written by | Jan Švankmajer |
Produced by | Jaromír Kallista |
Starring | Václav Helšus Klára Issová Zuzana Kronerová Emília Došeková Daniela Bakerová |
Cinematography | Jan Růžička Juraj Galvánek |
Edited by | Marie Zemanová |
Music by | Alexandr Glazunov Jan Kalinov |
Production companies | Athanor C-GA Film |
Distributed by | Bontonfilm |
Release dates |
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Running time | 109 minutes |
Countries | Czech Republic Slovakia |
Language | Czech |
Budget | 35 million Kč |
Surviving Life (Czech: Přežít svůj život) is a 2010 Czech comedy film by Jan Švankmajer, starring Václav Helšus, Klára Issová and Zuzana Kronerová. The film uses a mix of cutout animation from photographs and live-action segments, and tells the story of a married man who lives a double life in his dreams, where he meets another woman. It premiered out of competition at the 67th Venice International Film Festival.
The film was co-produced by Athanor and the Slovak company C-GA Film, with participation of Czech Television and UPP. It received eight million korun from the Czech State Fund for Support and Development of Cinematography and around six million korun from Eurimages. Additional support was granted by the MEDIA Programme.[1][2] The production involved a total budget of 35 million korun.[1] Animation work was done by an international team at Švankmajer's studio in Knovíz, just outside Prague.[3] The film uses Alexander Glazunov's Concert Waltz No.1 in D,op 47 as opening and ending theme.
Surviving Life premiered on 7 September 2010 out of competition at the 67th Venice International Film Festival.[4] It was subsequently shown at several festivals including the London Film Festival.[5] Bontonfilm released it in the Czech Republic on 4 November 2010.[6]
Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter called Švankmajer a "grand master not just of innovative animation techniques but of life itself", and wrote that the director "is at the height of his filmmaking powers as director, artistic director and storyteller here." Young also noted, however, that the film's complex narrative and unconventional imagery "will not be everyone's cup of tea."[7] Variety editor Leslie Felperin complimented the chemistry between Helšus and Issová, and noted how the film was more similar to Czech mainstream comedies than what normally would be expected from the director: "For all the grotesquerie on display (and there's hardly anything here as disturbing as Svankmajer's imagery in Alice from 1988), pic feels much lighter in tone than the helmer's last few films, such as Lunacy, Greedy Guts (aka Little Otik), or Conspirators of Pleasure."[8]
Švankmajer won the Czech Lion for Best Art Direction for the film.[9] It was also nominated for Best Director and Best Sound.[10]