In the Shadow

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The movie pictures a friendship and bravery at the times when courage was a ticket to the execution ground. Framed by a criminal story, the movie takes us to the spring of 1953, shortly after the death of the communist boss Klement Gottwald. He is replaced by Antonin Zapotocky who follows the tough course of repression and strengthening the communist regime. We see Captain Hakl pass through the dusky streets in his gray overcoat. A tenacious and somewhat choleric detective full of emotion and intuition, with whiskers and a hidden pain. Hakl has been with the police for 25 years having gone through service during the First Republic, Nazi occupation and now working for the communist National security. His apoliticalness and craving for partial truth bring him across more and more new facts implying that the seemingly simple case with an only suspect starts to twist. All the circumstantial evidence are heading to the Jewish community. He is followed by Major Zenke like a shadow, who is invited from East Germany as a specialist on Jewish crime. The story deals with a fabricated mugging orchestrated by the communist secret service in order to divert attention from the impending national disaster – monetary reform. This crime committed on a nation, having gotten out of control of the initiators, is one of the greatest robberies in Europe's modern history. (official distributor synopsis)

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J*A*S*M 

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English I gave it four stars at first because I’m happy about every Czech film that isn’t bad, and In the Shadow is not a bad film. The problem is that it’s not the good detective film that it wants to be most of the time. It works mostly on a dramatic level, but the unnecessarily complicated, confusing and vaguely narrated level of the detective investigation bothered me in the cinema. I didn’t get exactly the who, what, how and why… Technically speaking, it’s comparable to the European competition, which is good. What Czech cinema is missing the most today are good screenwriters. ()

Marigold 

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English In the Shadow is a successful dark thriller about an anti-Jewish conspiracy within the communist Czechoslovakia in the alarmed year of 1953. I was pleasantly surprised by how Ondříček civilized the realities - the 1950s are not only an absurdly dark time, but they also have a piece of "Hrabal" proletarianism and building crudeness in them (a great recitation of the poem “Kulak"). There is no point in pretending that this is a decent detective story - after a while it is quite clear that rather than a "whodunit" it is a heated clash between the stubborn captain of the crime squad and the StB. But this is where the film stumbles: even though Koch and Trojan act great and the film has well-written dialogues and holds the tension, in the end it unmasks the most banal clichés about heroism face to face with the "will from above". This happens at the cost of screenwriting grand circles and unrealistic solutions (in relation to the family, but also in relation to the entire monster trial with the Jewish community), and unfortunately, also the quite vague motivations of the characters (there is a complete level missing that would deal with the fact that both protagonists married "squids" and especially Captain Hakl can't be as angelically pure and principled as he looks in the film) and leads to an awkward heroic gesture at the end. In other words, realism and drama are overshadowed by noble morality about the heroes who revolted - instead of a layered film, we watch a trivial chess game with constructs at its core. It’s really too bad - the description of the environment reveals that there was much more going on. And finally: why does guiding music have to play during 90% of the runtime in every similar film? For God's sake, let the audience think and feel for themselves. ()

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Remedy 

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English Actually, this could have been a very good retro detective film with stunning visuals and imaginative intermingling of music and image (Ondříček successfully followed in the traditions of Protector and Walking Too Fast, which started this "phenomenon" in Czech cinema). Nonetheless, this is a story from the 1950s, so any rationalization of the investigation is only favorable until the point when it appeals to the comrades themselves. And great praise is due to Mr. Ondříček for managing to suitably balance the share of mystery and for the fact that, when all’s said and done, this is really a "political detective thriller" that uses all of its "mystery" solely for the purpose of portraying the nervous and dark atmosphere of the 1950s as faithfully as possible. ()

NinadeL 

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English Although Ondříček is once again working with his favorites Taclík and Trojan, his latest retro detective film does not remind us in the slightest of his older films. Which is a very good thing. Overall, the atmosphere, sets and costumes reflect the year 1953 very well. Moreover, the drama works and it is a pleasure to perceive the great acting performances of Jiří Štěpnička or Soňa Norisová next to the giant Sebastian Koch. ()

lamps 

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English Very solid. The atmosphere is excellent, dark and depressing, and thanks to the perfect sets, the tense 50s are literally palpable in every shot. The story unfolds like many classic crime thrillers and can't really surprise with anything, but the execution is almost flawless, from the cinematography, the aforementioned "rainy" atmosphere, the continuity of the twists and turns to the excellent performances. Ivan Trojan excels, confirming his reputation as the best Czech actor of our time, and much of the film relies on his heartfelt performance. Something similar can be said of Sebastian Koch, whose Major Zenke may not talk much, but he has charisma to spare. It's not a five-star treat, the story is still very hackneyed and lacking in emotion, but it has at least significantly restored my pride in Czech cinema after a long time. 80% ()

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