Crime in the Night Club (Crime in a Music Hall) is at once a detective comedy and an anti-totalitarian allegory set in an old-time Prague cabaret. The local star is singer Klára Králová alias Clara Regina (Eva Pilarová), of whom the Minister of Justice (Vlastimil Brodský) is enamored. The plot revolves around the theft of a pearl necklace and the murder of a juggler. A nosy employee, Pepíček (Jiří Suchý), is caught in the web of intrigue along with a recent law school graduate (Jiří Šlitr). During the film, the musical “Písničkové férii,” written by Josef Škvorecký for Eva Pilarova, is performed by a number of stars of the era. The style is director Jiří Menzel’s tribute to the First Republic-era films of Martin Frič. The film is a black comedy pop-up book, interlaced with a moral about the untouchable police and the hypocrisy of those in power. —febiofest.cz
With his debut feature film Closely Watched Trains (1966), Czechoslovakian filmmaker Jirí Menzel became an important member in Czech New Wave cinema and won an Academy Award. Menzel started out as an assistant director and occasional actor for Vera Chytilova following his graduation from the Prague film school F.A.M.U. In 1965, Menzel directed an episode (“The Death of Mr. Baltazar”) for the feature anthology Pearls of the Deep, a tribute to distinguished Czech author Bohumil Hrabal. Later that year, he contributed an episode in a similar tribute to the writings of Josef Skvorecky, Crime at the Girls School. Following the success of Closely Watched Trains, Menzel directed Capricious Summer (1968) and turned in a great performance as a tightrope walker (Menzel is actually an accomplished balancer and performs regularly on-stage). In 1969, he made Larks on a String, considered by many to be his best work. Unfortunately, its critical stance on Communism led to its being banned from release… read more
The award-winning novelist who wrote about jazz and movies also saw much of his work adapted for the screen, large and small.