Wild Flowers
Wild Flowers
| 06 December 2000 (USA)
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Seven seemingly unconnected fairy tales - glued together only by folklore, mood, color and light - make up this Czech collection of visual poetry. The original piece of literature, written by Karel Jaromír Erben in 1853, contained twelve tales.

Reviews
Harockerce

What a beautiful movie!

Matialth

Good concept, poorly executed.

Freaktana

A Major Disappointment

Luecarou

What begins as a feel-good-human-interest story turns into a mystery, then a tragedy, and ultimately an outrage.

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cinderella1

I just want to explain (especially to Murushi), that the director does not hate woman and children :o) its's simply so, that the original stories (ballads/folk-tales not fairy tales..) are really cruel and dark.. Director gave these stories a bit modern view, e.g. Vodnik (Waterman) is more a romantic story than a horror story.. He cries in the end so as the girl does. It shows him as a hot-tempered man doing this all in affect and grieving for what he has done. I just try to translate you the original end of this story from the book (if you don't mind - its a clear spoiler :o): Written by K.J.Erben in 1853, according to the old folklore stories in a romanticism style:"Two things they lie in blood here-frisson goes through the back:a child's head without a body a body without a head" Please, excuse my bad English :o)), but you see there is no place for sorrow in this story.. I just want to explain, that these stories are dark in their original but Brabec gave them a new and colorful face and maybe changed a bit our view of these stories (which our people knew from the basic school). I know these stories from my mother, she knows it from her mother and so on.. They even knew some of these poems whole by heart according to the book and were telling them to us when we were children :o) My granny's parents and her grand parents were telling these stories in winter time, when there was cold outside (and TV was no invented yet) and they wanted to have some fun :o)

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LordHaart

I don't know how could someone dislike a movie like this one. Most important to this movie is not story, but picture and emotions. I was really astonished by this movie and I still think its one of the best Czech movies and its picture is one of the best of all films. In my opinion the best part was The Water Spirit. Its ending with desperate man sitting in the mud and crying over his loss of wife and child is simply breathtaking. These emotions are so deep that everyone must feel it with the Spirit. Also the picture of girl falling from the bridge is fantastic. I think this movie is definitely worth seeing for the feelings inside..

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jethro-21

Like the guy from Alaska, I just came back from Europe this winter vacation, and in my stay at Prague I saw this movie. I had been seeing movies in all the countries I visited just to get a feel for their cinema (these are all non-subtitled foreign films i couldnt understand a word of), Schule in Germany, MeseAuto in Hungary, Billy Elliot in Austria and this.This film was extraodinary. The interestin thing is that we never understood any of the other movies and just had to figure things out from the visuals, like watching TV on mute. But this movie had very little dialogue anyway, so it didnt matter. I found myself overwhelmed by the cinematography. It reminded me a lot of Akira Kurosawa's Dreams.As far as I know, there was a famous poet who wrote 15 short stories, and this film is 7 of them (complete with 7 candles that one by one get blown out before each story). I'm not sure, but I took this to be a little like the movie Seven, where each candle, and thus, each story, represents one of the seven deadly sins. But because there were 15 stories in all, I'm not sure how well this theory holds up.This is an incredible movie to try to pick apart. THere is so much symbolism and there is no language barrier. If you ever make it to the Czech Republic or Prague, specifically, check this movie out.

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gulag

Kytice (The Bouquet or Garland) is an exquisitely beautiful compendium of Czech fairy tales in an mature mode. These is not fairy tales ala Disney. Rather this is 'Marchen', the serious mythopoeic stuff. These are fairy tales with a very dark brooding Eastern European flavour. I happened to fall upon this by accident in Prague in December of 2000. I did not understand the dialogue since I do not speak Czech. But then again I really didn't need to. The images were absolutely stunning. The film is a collection of seven stories loosely bolted together with an over riding theme. Visually I was reminded on "A Company of Wolves" or even "Immoral Tales", the blending of the genuinely erotic with a very dark undercurrent of death and fate were however quite beautiful. The stunning visuals did not need American special effects (and predictability) to convey absolutely unforgettable images. I recommend this with the highest and richest enthusiasm. Hunt this down. On a trip to Europe if need be. And, if you can, bother some distributors to translate this and get it out to the English speaking world.I won't spoil the plot anymore... you must see it for your self. Gulag.

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