Podejrzenia

(film telewizyjny)
Zwiastun

Opisy(1)

Starsza pani czuje się samotna i nikomu niepotrzebna. Nagle poznaje młodego człowieka, który twierdzi, że jest jej dalekim krewnym. Im lepiej się poznają, tym więcej wątpliwości rodzi się w głowie Kvety. (Prime Video)

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Recenzje (2)

Malarkey 

wszystkie recenzje użytkownika

angielski Jiří Strach chose a great psychological theme and together with the quality filmmaking it even overcame the fact that I am not really a fan of Jiřina Bohdalová after her political escapades, which would probably even involve shaking hands with Gustav Husák, if he were still alive. She performed excellently in this film and was complemented by Kryštof Hádek, although I have had higher expectations for his performance than for Bohdalová’s. The cute Kryštof has demonstrated what a great actor he is, and I have to admit that at times he was really scary. I have had a bit of an issue with how he, spoiler alert, in one scene suddenly changed into the good and mature one. Nevertheless, he left a great impression. A nice psychological small-scale film and another proof that this director can make even a TV film into a great experience. ()

Isherwood 

wszystkie recenzje użytkownika

angielski Almost like Hitchcock, but only almost... It's got the fear in hand, and it takes very little to lead the characters in the right direction, the actors give it their all, and the basement apartment of an anonymous Prague apartment building reduces the play area with passing minutes amazingly. It is therefore surprising that everything is subject to a completely retarded screenplay, where Epstein forcefully pushes all those worn-out motifs of "home invasion" genres, but he wades in the mud of clichés and logical nonsense (MacGyver wouldn't be needed for those keys on the window frame!), while luxuriously burying it Kryštof Hádek's character, who turns a cunning brat into a violent scumbag with the snap of a finger, but without a real transformation, without the willingness to work more on the motivations. It's all downhill from there, with Bohdalová riding, Hádek flirting with the border of parody (but somehow holding it together), and the sophisticated ending, which is supposed to be a tough catharsis, you expect and kind of smirk at it... foolishly, ironically, and with relief. PS: I understand that Jiří Strach is a devoted Catholic, but he and Marek didn't say their "yes" in church, so it wouldn't be a sin to use another writer's text. ()

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