A stork brings Markýtka and Kuba Dařbuján their twelfth child. Kuba is a hard-working miner but money is very short. In vain Kuba asks the rich fat brewer Pandrhola to give him a little bit of the draff to make porridge for his hungry children. Looking for someone as godfather to his daughter, Kuba refuses both God and the Devil, because he considers them both unjust to people. So the man with a scythe – Death – becomes the godfather, because he applies the same standard to all alike. As a christening present, Kuba is given a healing ability. Kuba leaves his mining work and proclaims himself a doctor. At the beginning, he is laughed at, but after he heals the paralysed Matěj, he becomes a popular healer. He lets the rich pay him well and helps the poor. Then, Pandrhola falls very ill. Kuba refuses to heal him, but finally, the ridiculous conditions he had set as a joke are fulfilled: there are sausages on the trees and there is beer running instead of water in the brook. Despite Death’s prohibition Kuba heals the brewer. The healed Pandrhola shuts Death into a barrel. People and animals stop dying. The witless and fastidious brewer has no meat on his table, and so he releases Death from the barrel. Pandrhola’s life is taken with one single stroke of the scythe in return. —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