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Kolya (1996)

Kolya (1996)
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55-year-old Louka (Zdenek Sverak) is a gifted musician in Czechoslovakia who once made a good living playing in the State Symphony Orchestra. However, he has little use for the government, and after putting a playfully insulting statement on a government form, he's been banished from official music making. He ekes out a living by giving private lessons, painting gravestones with gold leaf, and performing at funerals. Louka also likes to chase younger women, a surprisingly number of whom are more than happy to be caught. However, when a friend suggests marriage to a stranger, Louka is unexpectedly willing to consider the matter. It seems that Broz (Ondrej Vetchy), a gravedigger and a good friend of Louka's, has a niece, Nadezda (Irena Livanova), with a young son who wants to stay in Czechoslovakia. However, she's a Russian citizen and lacks the proper papers. In order to stay, the young mother needs to marry a Czech citizen, and she and her aunt are willing to pay a "husband" for his troubles. Louka, hard up for cash and in need of a used car, grudgingly agrees to the arrangement and weds Nadezda. However, once she has her papers, Nadezda heads for West Germany to be with her boyfriend, and after her aunt unexpectedly dies, Louka finds himself in custody of his new "stepson," six-year-old Kolya (Andrei Khalimon). A confirmed bachelor, Louka knows next to nothing about taking care of a child, and he discovers that parenthood cramps his style with the ladies. However, Louka and Kolya soon become good friends, and Louka finds his outlook on life beginning to change, just as the "Velvet Revolution" sounds the call of a new era in Czechoslovakia. Kolya won both the Academy Award and the Golden Globe as Best Foreign Language Film of 1997. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Zdenek SverakAndrei Khalimon, (more)
Director(s):
Jan Sverák
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG13
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Kolya

55-year-old Louka (Zdenek Sverak) is a gifted musician in Czechoslovakia who once made a good living playing in the State Symphony Orchestra. However, he has little use for the government, and after putting a playfully insulting statement on a government form, he's been banished from official music making. He ekes out a living by giving private lessons, painting gravestones with gold leaf, and performing at funerals. Louka also likes to chase younger women, a surprisingly number of whom are more than happy to be caught. However, when a friend suggests marriage to a stranger, Louka is unexpectedly willing to consider the matter. It seems that Broz (Ondrej Vetchy), a gravedigger and a good friend of Louka's, has a niece, Nadezda (Irena Livanova), with a young son who wants to stay in Czechoslovakia. However, she's a Russian citizen and lacks the proper papers. In order to stay, the young mother needs to marry a Czech citizen, and she and her aunt are willing to pay a "husband" for his troubles. Louka, hard up for cash and in need of a used car, grudgingly agrees to the arrangement and weds Nadezda. However, once she has her papers, Nadezda heads for West Germany to be with her boyfriend, and after her aunt unexpectedly dies, Louka finds himself in custody of his new "stepson," six-year-old Kolya (Andrei Khalimon). A confirmed bachelor, Louka knows next to nothing about taking care of a child, and he discovers that parenthood cramps his style with the ladies. However, Louka and Kolya soon become good friends, and Louka finds his outlook on life beginning to change, just as the "Velvet Revolution" sounds the call of a new era in Czechoslovakia. Kolya won both the Academy Award and the Golden Globe as Best Foreign Language Film of 1997. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
105 mins

Complete Cast of Kolya


Director(s):
Jan Sverák
Writer(s):
Zdenek Sverak
Producer(s):
Eric AbrahamJan Sverák
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG13(Sexual Situations, Adult Situations)
Categories:
Independent Films
Kolya Awards:
  • 1996 - Golden Globe - Best Foreign Language Film
  • 1996 - Hollywood Foreign Press Association - Best Foreign Language Film
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Member Reviews
 
Patti L.

A great movie....almost didn't rent it because of the subtitles....but it was easy to read and thoroughly engaging. Heartwarming, too.

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Adam K.

Excellent film, enjoyed it very much. Touching, funny, and poignant.

Yes   |   No

 
Jonathan C.

Kolya is a lovely movie with good character development. The women in Czechoslovakia in the movie in the later 1980's were depicted as being more submissive than woman is the United States today but under that parameter, the characters felt very real. The movie develops a very interesting and somewhat complicated relationship between a middle aged man and musician from Czechoslovakia and a boy from Russia along the backdrop of the happenings in Eastern Europe during that time. The ending feels very real.

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