Following a concert that must be held in a rural provincial town, two old friends meet again. Petr (Zdenek Bezusek), a city musician, arrives accompanied by his beautiful and childlike wife to the house of Bambas (Karel Blazek), who has gotten married, built a house, and lives with his parents, his wife and his children. Over the course of the weekend, the contrast between the urban and rural world comes to light, observed with fine humor, and the conformist horizon that puts an end to the dreams of youth and that, finally, reunites again to both friends. In this universe, which at times veers into the absurd, the gesture of rebellion is experienced as a melancholic evocation without consequences that gives way to the resumption of daily routine.
https://dvdstorespain.es/en/films/29295-intimni-osvetleni-dvd--8427328885096.html29295Intimni Osvetleni [DVD]Following a concert that must be held in a rural provincial town, two old friends meet again. Petr (Zdenek Bezusek), a city musician, arrives accompanied by his beautiful and childlike wife to the house of Bambas (Karel Blazek), who has gotten married, built a house, and lives with his parents, his wife and his children. Over the course of the weekend, the contrast between the urban and rural world comes to light, observed with fine humor, and the conformist horizon that puts an end to the dreams of youth and that, finally, reunites again to both friends. In this universe, which at times veers into the absurd, the gesture of rebellion is experienced as a melancholic evocation without consequences that gives way to the resumption of daily routine.https://dvdstorespain.es/507409-home_default/intimni-osvetleni-dvd-.jpg5.9504instockIntermedio5.95045.9504002016-06-07T09:04:45+0200/Start/Start/Films/Start/New/Start/EVENING SP 70/Start/VELADA DE 80/Start/VELADA FR 80/Start/VELADA IT 80
Following a concert that must be held in a rural provincial town, two old friends meet again. Petr (Zdenek Bezusek), a city musician, arrives accompanied by his beautiful and childlike wife to the house of Bambas (Karel Blazek), who has gotten married, built a house, and lives with his parents, his wife and his children. Over the course of the weekend, the contrast between the urban and rural world comes to light, observed with fine humor, and the conformist horizon that puts an end to the dreams of youth and that, finally, reunites again to both friends. In this universe, which at times veers into the absurd, the gesture of rebellion is experienced as a melancholic evocation without consequences that gives way to the resumption of daily routine.