Jan S. Kolár

Jan S. Kolár

Born 11/05/1896
Prague, Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Austria-Hungary

Died 30/10/1973 (77 years old)
Prague, Czechoslovakia

Biography

Jan Stanislav Kolár (1896, Prague – 1973, Prague) was already interested in film while studying law. He started directing in 1917, making a number of documentaries in addition to 13 features for which he wrote the screenplays and generally took a starring role. He soon began working with Karel Lamač and future star Anny Ondra (Anny Ondráková). Despite specializing in adventures and dramas, he co-directed Ondra’s modest debut in the comedy The Lady with the Small Foot (1919). His films include The Song of Gold (1920), The Poisoned Light (1921), and The Arrival from the Darkness (1921). His literary adaptations include the psychological novel The Dead Are Living (1922), The Cross at the Stream (1921), and a film addressing social issues, Řina (1926). At the end of the silent era he directed the historical epic St. Wenceslas (1929) to mark the saint’s millennium. This was Kolár’s last film. He later took a number of small roles and became a Czech film archivist.

48. MFF Karlovy Vary

Actor

Screenwriter

Movies
1937

Vyděrač

1929

St. Wenceslas

1928

Daughters of Eve - original screenplay

1926

Řina

1925

Parnasie

 

Vyznavači slunce

1922

Maharadžovo potěšení

 

Mrtví žijí

1921

Kříž u potoka

Ads

Ads

 

The Arrival from the Darkness

 

The Poisoned Light - screenplay, original screenplay

1920

Setřelé písmo - screenplay, original screenplay

 

Zpěv zlata - screenplay, original screenplay

1919

Akord smrti

 

Alois Wins the Lottery

 

Dáma s malou nožkou - screenplay, original screenplay

 

Teddy by kouřil

1918

Učitel orientálních jazyků

1917

Polykarp aprovisuje

Short
1921

The Torn Photograph

1917

Polykarpovo zimní dobrodružství

Director