
|
 |
|
|

 |
| |
|
|
 |
Freedom Festival 1999: Karlovy Vary
The town of Karlovy Vary, only a little more than 60 miles west of
Prague on the Czech-German border, became celebrated for its curative
springs under its German name of Carlsbad during the late 18th and early
19th centuries. After the Second World War the town began to attract
the attention of the international filmgoing public thanks to the
international film festival which was founded here in 1946.
The Festival enjoyed a period of glory during the 1960s but suffered a
decline during the “normalis-ation” period after the suppression of the
Prague Spring, when it faced competition from the Moscow Film Festival
(with which it was obliged to alternate, taking place every other year
from 1959 to 1994).
While the Festival was organised by the state until 1992, it then
gained independence with the newly established Karlovy Vary Film
Festival Foundation, headed by popular Czech actor Jírí Bartoska. This
independence was accompanied by the necessity for financial support from
sponsors. Fortunately the popularity of the Karlovy Vary International
Film Festival has continued to grow since 1994, both in the Czech
Republic and abroad. Every year at the beginning of July Karlovy Vary is
visited by viewers from all over the Czech Republic, young people in
particular, for whom the festival has practically become a cult venue.
The Festival naturally also lures hundreds of foreign
guests, journalists, film critics, international film-club members, and
each year brings greater numbers of foreign television crews, attracted
by, among other things, the presence of stars such as Michael Douglas,
Milos Forman, Mia Farrow, Gregory Peck, Lauren Bacall, Rod Steiger and
many others.
The foreign community, especially from Western Europe and the US,
welcomes the chance to see new works from the countries of the former
Eastern bloc in the special section “East of the West.” And the section
screening the latest Czech films is always guaranteed to generate lively
interest.
Visitors to the festival also look forward to the chance to see
retrospective screenings and focuses (the screening of Australian films,
the retrospectives on Antonin Artaud, Jean Epstein, Joris Ivens,
Sergei Eisenstein and on Czech animated film enjoyed huge successes).
Equally popular are the portraits of independent filmmakers including
Olivier Assayas, Nick Gomez and Alejandro Agresti.
All eyes, however, will be on the international competition of
feature-length films which, in accordance with international FIAPF
regulations may only include films which have not appeared in official
competition at other major film festivals. Thus the selection is
naturally considerably reduced, in view of the leading position of the
festivals at Cannes, Berlin and Venice. Nevertheless, the Festival is
making great headway here, too, as testified to by the fact that each
year many of the films shown in competition at Karlovy Vary are
subsequently short-listed as Oscar or Golden Globe nominations (Sergei
Bodrov’s Prisoner of the Mountains; and A Chef In Love by Nanna
Djordjadze, awarded in 1996; Ma vie en rose by Alan Berliner, the
winning film from 1997). The selectors for the competition programme
also endeavour to attract as many works as possible from those countries
whose films, with a few exceptions, are too frequently neglected at the
festivals in Cannes, Berlin or Venice.
A number of reports on the 33rd Karlovy Vary IFF in 1998 stated that the
standard of the films in competition now bears comparison with films
awarded at other large international festivals, here included in the
informative section Horizons. One of our great successes is the fact
that, each year, we are witnessing an increase in the number of films
which, after appearing at the Karlovy Vary IFF, have been successfully
brought into distribution, whether for the broader distribution network,
for film clubs or television viewers.
The 34th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, to be held 2-10 July
1999, will once again be the only FIAPF-accredited competitive festival
in Central and Eastern Europe. The aim of the organisers is to maintain
this status in future years, which will unquestionably prove to be an
exacting task requiring our full commitment.
|
|
 |
| |
Freedom Film Festival Poster
by Wiktor Sadowski © American
Cinema Foundation |
| |
|
| |
IN THE NAME OF FREEDOM
Essay by Eva Zaoralová, Program Director of the Karlovy Vary
International Film Festival |
| |
|
| |
THE HOLLOWAY FILE
Database of Russian and Ex-Soviet Union directors |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|

|
|
|
Buttoners / Knoflíkári / Die Knöpfler
Czech Republic (1997)
Correctly hailed as a wild return to the Czech Spring style of black
comedy that national cinema was known for in the 1960s, Buttoners is a
dazzlingly structured mosaic of interlinking stories that ponder a cruel
yet droll world as it moves from a certain catastrophic event of World
War II up to the chaotic and often absurd eccentricities of life in the
1990s.
About the Film
On August 6, 1945, cursing American pilots divert the Enola Gay to
Hiroshima as a group of men sipping tea below them in Kokura curse the
bad weather that has just saved their lives. Precisely 50 years later in
a taxi hurtling through Prague, the lives of an adulterous couple in the
back seat cross those of the cabbie in unforeseen ways. At the same time
a young couple is involved in a tragic road accident, their parents’
party to plan the upcoming nuptials degenerates into a bizarre parade of
perversions. Meanwhile, as a bickering couple watch a television program
detailing efforts to shoot frozen sperm into space, schoolchildren
summon the ghost of the Enola Gay’s pilot, who promptly offers an on-air
apology of sorts during a late-night radio program.
What does it all mean? Don’t look to the title for enlightenment, for
just as the cryptic name defies definition in any language (and logic in
the movie’s narrative), words alone can’t simulate the mood of this long
night on a seemingly Czech-ruled Earth siezed by a singular strain of
pre-millennial madness.—Eddie Cockrell
Director's Filmography
By the time Petr Zelenka (b. 1967, Prague, Czech Republic) graduated
with a degree in screenwriting from the Prague Film School (FAMU) in
1991 (both his parents wrote scripts as well), he had already worked as
dramaturg at the Barrandov Studios, collaborated with the BBC on the
program Czech-Mate, written numerous screenplays, directed some
documentaries and translated plays from English to Czech (with a
successful emphasis on the work of Michael Frayn). His debut feature,
the This is Spinal Tap-inspired Mnága-Happy End (1996), won a prize at
the Cottbus Film Festival, and to date Buttoners
(which he calls “a black comedy about forgiveness”) has won numerous
awards, including the Tiger Award at the 1998 International Film
Festival Rotterdam and Czech Lions for best film, supporting actor (Jirí
Kodet) and as the film critics’ favorite work.
|
|
102 min., color and b/w, 35mm
Czech, English and Japanese with English subtitles
Director: Petr Zelenka
Screenplay: Petr Zelenka
Dir. of photography: Miro Gábor
Music: Ales Brezina
Editor: David Charap
Producer: Alexei Guga
Production: Czech Television, TS Cestmira Kopeckého, Petr Zelenka
Cast: Jirí Kodet, Borivoj Navratil, Rudolf Hrusínsky, Eva Holubova,
Vladimir Dlouhy, David Cerny, Frantisek Cerny, Michaela
Pavlatova,Seisuke Tsukahara, Pavel Zajícek, Jan Haubert
Contact: Ceská televize--Telexport,
Kavci Hory, 140 00 Praha 4, Czech Republic
vox: 011.42.02.61.21.29.45, 61.13.70.46
fax: 011.42.02.61.21.13.54 |
|
| |
|
|
The Circus Burned Down, The Clowns Are Gone
( Cirk sgorel, i klouny
razbezalis )
Russia (1998)
About the Film
An elaborate and earthy metaphor for the struggle to find inspiration,
motivation and support in a world gone mad, Vladimir Bortko’s first film
in six years follows the efforts of a once-famous filmmaker, Nikolaj
Khudokormov (Nikolaj Karacencev), to raise money for a new film on the
eve of his 50th birthday. Times have been tough, and as he calls on
bankers, politicians and entrepreneurs to secure funding, he feels both
humiliated and helpless.
He gets no help from either his senile mother or his two ex-wives, the
first of which has let their daughter slip into a life of
prostitution. The second is no better, so involved with her foreign
lover that she fails to notice that her son no longer speaks Russian. It
is only when the director finds a mysterious muse who follows him and
speaks of the futility of his efforts that the filmmaker’s fate begins
to come into focus. As the title suggests, Bortko’s melancholia is both
whimsical and apocalyptic, painting a colorful picture of the emotional
chaos in the heart of the contemporary artist.
—Eddie Cockrell
Director's Filmography
After graduating in 1974 from the Kiev Theatre Institute with a degree
in film directing, Vladimir Bortko (b. 1946, Moscow, Russia) apprenticed
in Kiev before beginning a directing career at Lenfilm that includes the
feature films The Investigation Commission (1978), My Father the
Idealist (1980), The Blonde Around the Corner (1983) and Once Lied
(1987). During this period he also directed the television films No
Family (1984) and The Voice (1986). More recently he has directed Heart
of a Dog (1988) from the Bulgakov novel, the Italian co-production
Afghan Breakdown (1991) and the comedy Good Luck to You, Sirs! (1992).
|
|
115 min., color, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Vladimir Bortko
Screenplay: Vladimir Bortko
Dir. of photography: Sergej Lando
Music: Vladimir Daskevic
Editor: Leda Semjonova
Production: NTV-Profit Film Company, Lenfilm
Cast: Nikolaj Karacencev, Nina Ruslanova, Zinaida Sarko,
Tatjana Vasiljeva, Xenija Kacalina, Maria Suksina, Tana Ju,
Sergej Doncov, Roman Gromadskij
Contact: NTV-Profit Film Company, 3 Building,
7 Verchniaya Radischevskaya str., 109004 Moscow, Russia
vox: 011.7.095.9153301 fax: 011.7.095.971.1279
e-mail: ntvprofit@glasnet.ru |
|
| |
|
|
Day of the Full Moon / Dyen Polnoluniya
Russia (1998)
Winner of a Special Mention FIPRESCI award from a jury of international
film critics at the 1998 Karlovy Vary festival, Day of the Full Moon is
a stunningly photographed series of vignettes from Russia past and
present that summons the spirit of Max Ophuls’ 1950 classic La Ronde,
Robert Altman’s American landmarks Nashville and Short Cuts as well as
the time-shifting strategies of Alain Resnais (Mon Oncle d’Amerique,
Same Old Song) to tell provocative and interconnecting stories
illustrating the waltz of years and whim of memory.
About the Film
In 1948, three people-a young man, a boy and a waiter-are captivated
during the full moon by a mysterious woman in a lilac dress. Like stones
in a pond, the effects of this event ripple throughthe years, and grow
to wash over more than 80 characters, from a disc jockey to a fairy
princess to a gangster to Alexander Pushkin to a nostalgic dog. But
which of these are dreams, and which represent reality?
Director Karen Shakhnazarov continues his career-long focus and the
intersection of past and present with this mysterious yet exhilirating
mosaic of humankind, which in the end offers both seduction and
satisfaction to the receptive viewer. —Eddie Cockrell
Director's Filmography
Karen Shakhnazarov (b. 1952, Krasnodar, Russia) graduated from the Film
Directors Faculty of Moscow’s All-Union State Institute of
Cinematography (VGIK) in 1975. After making short satirical films and
writing a number of scripts, he came to international attention with the
music-themed features We are from the Jazz Band (1983) and A Winter
Evening in Gagry (1985). His filmography includes The Kind Hearted Ones
(1979), Courier (1986), Zero Town (1988), Assassin of the Tzar (1991,
starring Malcolm McDowell), Dreams (1993, co-directed with Full Moon’s
co-scenarist Alexander Borodyansky) and American Daughter (1995). He is
currently president of the Mosfilm Cinema concern.
|
|
93 min., color, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Karen Shakhnazarov
Screenplay: Alexander Borodyansky, Shakhnazarov
Dir. of photography: Gennady Karjuk
Music: Anatoly Kroll
Editor: Lidya Milioti
Production: Kurier Studios
Cast: Vladimir Ilyin, Valery Premykhov, Valery Storozhik,
Anna Germ, Andrei Panin,
Elena Koreneva, Filip Yankovsky
Contact: Mosfilm International, Inc.,
1 Mosfilmovskaya Street,
119858 Moscow, Russia
vox: 011.7.095.1475577
fax: 011.7.095.9382083 |
|
| |
|
|
Dead Beetle / Mrtvej Brouk
Czech Republic (1998)
About the Film
A spirited, gently surreal saga of disaffected youth set against the
clubs and cornfields in and around contemporary Prague, this noteworthy
feature film debut charts the rocky road to a kind of love between
aspiring actor Martin (Jan Zuska) and the waif-like Marketa (Pavlina
Jiraskova), whom he meets during a brief incarceration in a psychiatric
hospital after eating the cut flowers (garnished with ketchup) off of
his table in a pub during a wild spree.
Yet neither seem to exhibit symptons beyond the ennui and angst typical
to young adults, and that seems to be the point of the leisurely
narrative: as in the work of Jean Vigo, Lindsay Anderson (look for
pointed references to both If... and O Lucky Man!) and fellow Czech
Milos Forman, life for the intrepid everyperson is an invigorating quest
for individual freedom laced with the benign warmth of poetic fantasy.
Perhaps referring to the punning title, one character neatly sums it
up:“like cars, people can break down if overused and underserviced.”
Members of the Bohnice mental hospital theatrical company are featured
to memorable effect in the scenes set there, and that’s co-producer
Pavel Melounek in a wordless cameo as “the big head” who bests Martin
for the lead in a television commercial.—Eddie Cockrell
Director's Filmography
The son of a civil engineer, Pavel Marek (b. 1963, Calcutta, India) took
degrees in electro-technics from Prague University in 1988 and film
directing from the Prague Film School (FAMU) in 1995. During these years
he also made a name for himself as a playwright and filmmaker with
surrealist flair, directing numerous shorts (including Tutor of Fear,
The Dead Forest, The Harvest and The Day of the Dog) that received
acclaim at international festivals. After acting in Jan Svankmajer’s
short Food (1992) and 1994 feature Faust, he directed the short Sredni
Vashtar (from the story by Saki). His feature film debut, Dead Beetle,
was a Tiger Award nominee when it premiered last year in Rotterdam and
has subsequently been selected for festivals in Washington, D.C.,
Karlovy Vary, Molodist and Cottbus.
|
|
96 min., color and b/w, 35mm
Czech with English subtitles
Director: Pavel Marek
Screenplay: Pavel Marek
Dir. of photography: Divis Marek
Music: Michal Dvorak, David Koller
Editor: Alois Fisárek
Producers: Pavel Melounek, Marek Brodsky
Production: Whisconti, Czech Television, Kratky Film Praha
Cast: Jan Zuska, Pavla Jiraskova, Martin Jezek, Ondrej Maly,
Monika Cernoskova, Jiri Machacek, Hana Seidlova,
Alice Veldenova, Jiri Pospisil, Gabriela Hyrmanova
Contact: Whisconti, Panská 1, 110 00 Praha 1, Czech Republic
vox: 011.42.02.24.23.62.57
fax: 011.42.02.24.23.82.25
e-mail: whisconti@login.cz
Ceská televize-Telexport, Kavci Hory, 140 00
Praha 4, Czech Republic
vox: (011.42.02) 61.21.29.45, 61.13.70.46
fax: (011.42.02) 61.21.13.54
|
|
| |
|
|
The Land of the Deaf / Strana Gluchich / Das Land der Stille
Russia (1998)
Winner of the New Director’s Showcase Award at its 1998 Seattle Film
Festival American premiere, Valery Todorovsky’s fourth feature deftly
mixes elements of the classic Hollywood-issue melodrama (think 1930s
Warner Bros.) with Moscow’s current reputation as a volatile blend of
Las Vegas, Dodge City and Prohibition-era Chicago. Just as her boyfriend
Alyosha (Nikita Tiunin) seems ready to use her as collateral for a
gambling debt, spunky Rita (Chulpan Khamatova) slips out of a Moscow
strip club with the aid of jaded dancer Jaja (Dina Korzun), who,
in addition to being 80 percent deaf, appears to be a compulsive liar.
As they hide out in a sculptor’s studio, Jaja talks the reluctant Rita
into a life of prostitution on their way to financial security and a
trip to the fanciful island of the title, where “no cruel people live.”
Yet fate intervenes, with one last test of the women’s resolve in the
form of sympathetic mobster Svinja (literally, pig) and the ill-timed
return of Alyosha.
Writing of his 1993 film noir Katia Ismailova (hailed as perhaps the
first Russian stab at that genre), Todorovsky pointed out that “fifteen
years ago the language of cinema was that of illusions. Today one deals
with everything, openly; I hope I have made a film of extreme and
absolute passions, treating them with force and simplicity.” Sumptuously
photographed and vividly scored, The Land of the Deaf builds on that
ambition, confirming Todorovsky as a stylist of languid power.—Eddie
Cockrell
Director's Filmography
Himself the son of a film director, Valeri Todorovsky (b. 1962, Odessa,
Ukraine) graduated from the screenwriting faculty at Moscow’s All-Union
State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK) in 1984. His award-winning
films as director include the student-short-turned-feature Catafalque
(1990), Love (1991) and Katia Ismailova (aka Evenings Near Moscow, 1993)
a modern-day version of "Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk." He wrote the scripts
for Gambrinus (1990), The Vent (1991) and Over the Dark Water (1993),
co-produced The Miss (1991) for TTL Films partner and director Sergei
Livnev (who subsequently produced The Land of the Deaf) and edited the
television miniseries Queen Margot (1996).
|
|
119 min., color, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Valeri Todorovsky
Screenplay: Valeri Todorovsky, Yuri Korotkov,
from the novella "To Possess and to Belong"
by Renata Litvinova
Dir. of photography: Yuri Shaigardanov
Music: Alexej Aigi
Editor: Natalia Kutsherenko
Producer: Sergej Livnev
Production: Gorky Filmstudio
Executive Producer: Maxim Koropkov
Cast: Chulpan Khamatova, Dina Korzun, Maxim Sukhanov, Nikita Tiunin,
Alexander Yatsko, Alexej Gorbunov, Pavel Poymalov
Contact: Gorky Filmstudio, ul. S. Eisensteina 8, 129226 Moscow, Russia
vox: 011.7.095.812186
fax: 011.7.095.889871 |
|
| |
|
|
The Powder Keg / Bure Baruta
(France/Greece/Macedonia/
Turkey/Yugoslavia, 1998)
To the exclusive list of visionary, subversive films made from
innovative, politically charged urban theater pieces, add the violent,
funny, profane and dazzling The Powder Keg. Adapted from a stage play
that clocks 24 harrowing hours in the underbelly of urban Belgrade, and
injected with a strong but subtle dose of political pertinence, these
short cuts comprise a crazy and combustible daisy chain of coincidence,
as strangers and friends ricochet off each other in an extended ballet
of misunderstanding, pain, frustration and anger that begins with a
minor traffic altercation and escalates to murder.
A meek citizen erupts when a careless teenager involves him in a fender
bender; a 17-year-old Bosnian Serb refugee rebels against his idealistic
parents and becomes enmeshed in a shady drug scheme; two burly boxers
square off in their gym’s shower, with tragic results; an agitated teen
hijacks a bus for a brief midnight joyride; a returning immigrant tries
to woo back a former lover.
The huge, all-star cast of iconic types pawns, really seems driven by a
particularly cruel fate, a sensation heightened by "Boris, the esoteric
cabaret artist" who opens and closes the film.
Although patches are rough going (which is as it should be),
Paskaljevic’s point is that just beneath the confusion and hair-trigger
mayhem, these honest, good-hearted people remain defiantly human.
Explosive, unpredictable and passionate,this is urgent, relevant cinema
of the highest order —Eddie Cockrell
Director's filmography
Paskaljevic’s newest film, The Powder Keg, is winner of the European
Film Academy’s 1998 European Critics Award, Best Film awards from three
festivals (including Venice, where it received a 10-minute standing
ovation) and is Yugoslavia’s official submission to the Academy Awards.
A Yugoslav of Serbian descent, Goran Paskaljevic (b. 1947, Belgrade)
developed a love of film early at the Belgrade Cinemateque, which was
run by his stepfather (Italian neorealism was a reported favorite). He
studied at Prague’s distinguished FAMU from 1967 to 1971, making the
student films Mister Hrstka (1968), A Few Words About Love (1970) and
his graduate work, Legend of Lapot (1971). The approximately 30
documentary and short films he directed between 1972 and 1976 include
The Emigrants (1971-1974), Children (1973), Servant (1973) and Burden
(1974). His award-winning features include Beach Guard in Winter (1976),
The Dog Who Loved Trains (1978), ...And the Days are Passing (1979),
Special Treatment (1980), Twilight Time (1982), The Elusive Summer of
’68 (1984), Guardian Angel (1987), Time of Miracles (1990), Tango
Argentino (1992) and Someone Else’s America (1995). During the last
three years he has been the subject of career retrospective tributes in
Spain, France and Italy (a 10-city tour in 1998).
|
|
100 min., color, 35mm
Serbo-Croat with English subtitles
Director: Goran Paskaljevic
Screenplay: Dejan Dukovski and Goran Paskaljevic, with the collaboration
of Filip David and Zoran Andric,
from the play "Bure Baruta" by Dejan Dukovski
Dir. of photography: Milan Spasic
Music: Zoran Simjanovic
Editor: Petar Putnikovic
Producers: Antoine de Clermont-Tonnerre, Goran Paskaljevic
Production: MACT, Ticket Productions, Stefi S.A., Gradski Kina
Cast: Nikola Ristanovski, Nebojsa Glogovac, Miki Manojlovic, Marko
Urosevic, Bogdan Diklic, Dragan Nikolic, Mira Banjac, Danil Bata
Stojkovic, Velimir Bata Zivojinovic, Nebojsa Milovanovic, Aleksandar
Bercek, Lazar Ristovski, Vojislav Brajovic, Ana Sofrenovic, Mirjana
Jokovic, Ivan Bekjarev, Milena Dravic, Sergej Trifunovic, Ljuba Tadic,
Toni Mihajlovski, Mirjana Karanovic, Dragan Jovanovic
Contact: Paramount Classics, 5555 Melrose Avenue, Chevalier Building
#210, Hollywood, California 90038
vox: 323.956.2000
fax: 323.862.1212 |
|
| |
|
|
Rivers of Babylon
Slovakia (1998)
As visual metaphors in 1990s Slovakia go, the idea of a hotel boilerman
parlaying his power over guests and superiors into a country-wide reign
of terror is both original, and, in the case of recent political
developments there, devilishly accurate. This is why Peter Pistanek’s
1990 novel "Rivers of Babylon" became such a sensation there, where the
durable Slovak sense of self and country can always withstand a little
sarcastic scrutiny. How popular is Pistanek’s dyspeptic view? A sequel
has already been published, with a third volume on the way.
Photographed on location in the formerly lavish, now-seedy Kiev Hotel in
downtown Bratislava, the film follows the rags-to-riches story of the
brutish Racz (Andrej Hryc), who arrives from the country and lands a job
as stoker at the ritzy Ambassador in large part to impress his future
father-in-law. Racz is at first embarrassed by his lowly position but
soon learns that he who controls the heat might conquer the world.
"Today," Hryc points out, tongue perhaps firmly in cheek, “there are
politicians in Slovakia whose personality corresponds to that of Racz.”
Five years in the making (the former government, not quite so amused,
withdrew state subsidy), Rivers of Babylon is the country’s official
Oscar submission as well as a darkly funny confirmation that whatever
their delays on the road to stability, Slovaks, unlike a lot of people,
much less countries, can enjoy a good laugh on themselves.
—Eddie Cockrell
Director's Filmography
Before graduating in film and television from the Bratislava Academy of
Arts (VSMA), Vladimír Balco (b. 1949, Liptovsky Ján, Slovakia) worked as
a technician and cameraman at the Koliba Film Studios in the hills above
the Slovak capital city. After his student film Three Tons of Happiness
won the grand prize at the 1980 Oberhausen Short Film Days, he returned
to Koliba as a director. His documentaries include Hummel (1987), Thirty
Tons of Happiness (1990), Opera Session (1992) and Lúcnica Dance
Ensemble (1993). His fiction feature films include Angle of View (1984),
You May (1985), Paso Doble for Three (1986), Attitude (1988) and Flight
of the Cement Pigeon (1990).
|
|
102 min., color, 35mm
Slovak with English subtitles
Director: Vladimír Balco
Screenplay: Vladimír Balco, Marián Urban,
from the novel by Peter Pistánek
Dir. of photography: Martin Strba
Music: Jaroslav Filip
Editor: Dusan Milkov
Producer: Marian Urban
Production: Filmová spolocnost Alef studio, s.r.o., Bratislava/Ceská
televize-TS Cestmíra Kopeckého
Cast: Andrej Hryc, Ady Hajdu,
Diana Morová, Bára Kodetová,
Lubo Gregor, Miro Noga, Oldrich Navrátil, Stano Danciak
Contact: Alef Film Media Group, Ltd., Tekovská 7, 821 09 Bratislava,
Slovakia
vox: 011.42.17.525.8511
fax: 011.42.17.525.8510
e-mail: film@rainside.sk |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|