Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1982


She Grazed Horses on Concrete

Buy She Grazed Horses on Concrete now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'She Grazed Horses on Concrete' is a film which lays out serious topics that include a woman's capacity to hold her own in society, sexual mores, and abortion, and balances them with comedy and irony[http://www.kinokultura.com/specials/3/pasla.shtml Kevin Brochet, "tefan Uher and Milka Zimkov: 'She Grazed Horses on Concrete (Psla kone na betne)' 1982."] in proportions that instantly made it one of the biggest domestic blockbusters in Slovak cinema.Vclav Macek, 'tefan Uher 1930-1993.' 2002.

A quarter of a century later, its DVD release sold out within weeks. The film, directed by the reputed tefan Uher, made the women at its center stage stand for humankind as matter-of-factly as much of Central European filmmaking had been portraying men's worlds, the quiet turnaround never even became a talking point. It was also the first film that employed a regional variety of the language that would be naturally used where the story took place,[http://www.kinokultura.com/specials/3/votruba.shtml#cz1918 Martin Votruba, "Historical and Cultural Background of Slovak Filmmaking."] which provided an additional layer of humor whose novelty had people rolling in the aisles.

Its baffling title quotes a verse from a fresh folk song about a woman striving to accomplish impossible feats. Attempts to render it in English resulted in the film being shown and quoted under a range of titles that have included 'She Kept Crying for the Moon, She Kept Asking for the Moon, A Ticket to Heaven' (also the erroneous 'A Ticket to the Heaven'), and 'Concrete Pastures.'

The film was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Silver Prize.

Plot



Johanka (Milka Zimkov) had a fling with a well-digger (Peter Von) she had not met before and who, she was most likely certain, would never be around again. About 18 years later, she is a single woman respected and recognized at the local co-op farm where she works except that it does not translate to the same compensation for her as for the male workers who keeps turning down her lifelong suitor, friend and neighbor Berty (Peter Stank). Her 18-year-old daughter Paulna (Veronika Jenkov) commutes by bus to work in the nearby city, which gives the village gossips the occasional opportunity to remind her of her unknown father. A resultant conflict with her mother makes Paulna take up residence in the city.

Johanka, prodded by her also-single friend Jozefka (Marie Logojdov) who maintains that a woman without a man is nothing, begins to woo the new teacher Jarek (Ji Klepl) only to discover later that he is married. Paulna, in the meantime, loses her virginity to the soldier Jirka (Ivan Kleka) who promptly makes himself scarce. Johanka fails to consider that she actually has a better life than some of her married neighbors, begins to see abortion or marriage as Paulna's only options, and places personals on her behalf. Although tefan (ubomr Paulovi), one of the men who respond, turns out to be less than ideal, Paulna falls for him.

As tefan's car breaks down on the way to the elaborate wedding party and the cake adorned with a doll he is bringing begins to melt in the heat, Paulna, in her wedding dress and tipsy before the ceremony, suffers miscarriage, perhaps as a result of Johanka's earlier attempt to induce abortion that would look as if it occurred spontaneously. The car that carries Paulna to the hospital passes tefan's car towed by a farm tractor, but none of the involved notice.

Director



tefan Uher (1930, Prievidza 1993, Bratislava) graduated from the FAMU (Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts)[http://web.amu.cz/?r_id=610 FAMU] in Prague in 1955. Among his fellow students were future directors Martin Holl Jr. and Peter Solan who also began to work at the Koliba film studios[http://mapy.zoznam.sk/index.pl?zoom=9&pos_x=-573882&pos_y=-1277770&size=small&lang=sk&sipka=1&name=Bre%E8tanov%E1%2C%20Bratislava Koliba] (then called the Feature Film Studio and the Short Film Studio) in Bratislava after graduation. Uher first worked in the short film division. His second feature film, 'The Sun in a Net' is still recognized as a milestone in the development of Slovak and Czech cinema.[http://www.uh.cz/p100/p100/tipy.htm Projekt 100] Milka Zimkov acted in his three previous films. The cameraman of 'She Grazed Horses on Concrete,' Stanislav Szomolnyi, later professor of cinematography at the University of Performing Arts,[http://www.vsmu.sk VMU] Bratislava, made nine other films with Uher.

Screenplay



Milka Zimkov's (b. 1951, Okrun) collection of short stories 'She Grazed Horses on Concrete' ('Psla kone na betne,' 1980) was an instant success and has been republished least six times through the 2000s. Documentary film director Fero Feni wrote a literary-narrative screenplay on themes from the last of the fifteen stories, "A Ticket to Heaven" ('Vstupenka do neba'), but when he began to work with Zimkov on a shooting script, she disagreed with his bleak take on the story and the demotion of Johanka's character to a supporting role and refused him as the film's potential director.DVD bonus material. Feni stuck to his approach and directed his reworked screenplay under the title 'A Juice Novel' ('Dusov romn,' 1984, released 1988) at the Barrandov Studios.

Zimkov then found an accommodating co-writer in Uher who knew her from her roles in his three previous films. Their screenplay absorbed several of the themes and characters from her debut in fiction, but apart from that, there is little resemblance between the book's self-contained tales and the film's integrated storyline. Zimkov said that the title was a phrase used in her village to describe someone who had happiness within reach and then lost it.In an interview with Vladimr Justl, 'Nov knihy,' 4 Oct. 1989 That local meaning would not have been recognized by most viewers, though. It is a line from a waggish folk song. It continues "she bathed in razor blades..." and depicts a woman acting out impracticable feats. Zimkov was key in the film's outcome: she was the author of the original book, co-wrote the screenplay, was familiar with the region where the story took place, and took on the leading role of Johanka.

Cast



Milka Zimkov played in tefan Uher's three previous films. The cast was composed of little known actors, several of them Czechs who were capable of giving convincing performances in Slovak as well as in its eastern regional variety, but the successful use of the local dialect also gave the distributors in the Czech-speaking area of Czechoslovakia the idea to have it subtitled in Czech, a complete rarity in the history of Czechoslovak cinema. Many of the extras were hired at arisk Michaany and Fintice, two of the filming locations, as well as in neighboring Ostrovany.Kamila Hrabkov, "Vo filme Psla kone na betne je v zbere pod sprchou ako prv diea s namydlenou hlavou." 'Korzr,' 24 Feb. 2004.

Release dates



The premiere was in Bratislava in 1982, the film opened in Czechoslovakia's Czech-speaking part in 1983, it was released in the former East Germany in 1984 under the literal translation 'Sie weidete Pferde auf Beton,' which was also the case with its Polish title 'Pasa konie na betonie,' while the Hungarian rendition of the title was 'Betonlegel' ('A Concrete Pasture'), the latter two countries saw it in 1985.

'She Grazed Horses on Concrete' was released on 'DVD' in the PAL format, 4:3 aspect ratio, region-free ("Region 0") with English subtitles by 'SME'/Slovensk filmov stav[http://www.sme.sk/dvd1/?id=8 DVD edcia dennka 'SME' a Slovenskho filmovho stavu.] in 2006.

References




Buy She Grazed Horses on Concrete now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1982



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1103298274.