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Oldřich Lipský's one-of-a-kind Czech black comedy employs an ingenious twist - telling the life story of a philanderer and condemned murderer entirely in reverse: from his 'birth' at the guillotine, to his departure as an infant. Starring the great Vladimír Menšík in a rare leading role, the film is wildly inventive and disarmingly hilarious. The reverse chronology, with events playing out completely backwards, upends the narrative flow to become a playful, surreal, Dadaist experience unlike anything else in contemporary cinema. (Second Run)

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DaViD´82 

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English A sad lifetime seen backward. The picture doesn’t only rely on showing an ordinary situation backward somewhat slapstick style. That would get boring pretty quickly. It creates its own world of genius, with its own rules and humor, where the visual comedy of regular situations played back inside out really is just one of its winning aspects. And that is where Happy End differs from many other pictures with a similar idea. And it’s all underpinned by the genius narration by the “newborn" Vladimír Menšík. amenic hcezC fo eceip lausunu A. Oldřich Lipský’s best movie. Really. ()

Othello 

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English The equivalent of a stoner party where every word is used as a pun and taken out of context just for an instant burst of laughter. At the same time, the film is quite surprising in its morbidity (you can’t put Otýlie Vranská back in the box), its naturalism (the slaughterhouse), and how manic it is in its infantilism. A great combination. ()

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kaylin 

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English Sometimes you really wonder what treasures you will find in Czech cinema. An incredibly intriguing concept of telling the story in reverse, but with the twist that it's used for an engaging narrative where dialogues reign supreme, and thanks to the reverse chronology, they are very witty. The acting is excellent. The Czechs had some really great and innovative creators. ()

lamps 

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English Perfect piece of work. In the 1960s, Czech cinema was so advanced that even the Americans should take out their notebooks and organize professional screenings of films like Happy End. The amazing actors are overshadowed by a unique script where characters walk backwards, broken objects are mended, food comes out of mouths back onto plates, and everything comes together to form a story that intertwines with the real, "forward-moving" one in a truly admirable and thoughtful way. And of course, as is usual with Lipský, the whole thing is smart, funny and exaggerated. It’s certainly not the best, but thanks to the originality of the premise, it’s the most interesting Czechoslovak film ever made. At least now we know where Nolan may have gotten some of his inspiration for Memento :D 95% ()

gudaulin 

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English If Happy End was filmed today, it would become a sensation and would tour a few festivals, eventually entering the Oscar race. There would be talk about it in superlatives and international feedback would surpass domestic praise. However, at the time of its premiere, the audiences in movie theaters rewarded it with polite disinterest and saw it more as a curiosity, without any significant reactions, and surprisingly, even the film critics let it fizzle out. In the following decades, it was not utilized by television either, so it remained hidden from the wider public for a long time. It is a clever playful experiment, where the story is told in reverse. It has finely crafted and coordinated dialogue that, when juxtaposed with the events on the screen, usually gains a secondary ironic meaning. The biggest mystery associated with Happy End for me is why I don't feel like giving this entertaining game of cruelly punished infidelity the highest rating. Overall impression: 85%. ()

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