True, Anton Špelec is by trade a producer of musical instruments, but in his heart and soul he is a sharp-shooter. In a little provincial town arrangements are being made for a large parade during which the worthy sharp-shooters will be decorated with medals. Anton believes that this time the council will come to him but he is disappointed, for they are one medal short and he must wait for another year. Then in the pub he drinks so much that he insults the emperor for which he is sentenced to jail. It is necessary, however, to fulfil the order, so Anton decides to send his employee Josef Kukačka in his stead while he works secretly at home alone. But even Kukačka doesn’t want to go to jail and he sends there in his place a vagabond who would like to wait out the winter in a jail cell. As luck would have it, the vagabond dies while serving the sentence. So it comes about that Anton is officially dead and in the town a solemn funeral is planned. Špelec can no longer hold out and he turns up among the grieving guests as his own brother Rudolf who has allegedly been living many years abroad. He closely resembles Anton, but he acts quite differently. His wife and relatives hold this new Špelec in higher regard. And he also becomes a sharp-shooter … —nfa.cz
With 85 feature films to his credit, Martin Fric (aka Martin Fritsch in his German films) was Czechoslovakia’s most prolific director. Over his four-decade-long career, Fric worked in nearly all genres but was best known for his comedies. Fric entered the entertainment industry at age 16 as an actor and cabaret performer. In 1919, he joined the newly established Czech cinema as a lab assistant, later working as a camera operator and also designing posters. In 1922, Fric began writing screenplays and started appearing in films as an actor. Two years later, he began collaborating with director Karel Lamac. Fric made his solo directorial debut with Pater Vojtech/Father Vojtech in 1928. During the ‘30s and ’40s, Fric made a series of popular comedies, the best of which starred Jiri Voskovec and Jan Werich. Two Fric’s best-known comedies include Krstian (1939) and Pytlakova Schovanka/The Poacher’s Ward (1949). Fric had one of his earliest international successes with Janosik, the tale of… read more