Showing posts with label 1988 jan svankmajer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1988 jan svankmajer. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 April 2020








Some of Jan Svankmajer's illustrations for Carroll's Through the Looking Glass.

Despite filming Alice's adventures in Wonderland as Alice in 1988, and filming Jabberwocky as a short in 1971, Svankmajer never made a version of Through the Looking Glass, meaning these illustrations are about as close as we'll ever get to a looking glass adaptation from him. 

Images via AliceManiA

Tuesday, 22 October 2019

ARCHIVE POST: PSA: About those cakes in 1988's Alice...







Image result for Povidlové koláčky

The cakes in Alice (1988) bare a curious resemblance to Czech “povidlove kolacky” or prune marmalade cakes! In fact, they may well be the same!

Thank you very much to instergram user kamilabert for pointing this out!

UPDATE: Found an English explanation of what these are: according to wikicommons, these are " Czech sweet bread with plum jam or poppy seeds" 

There are lots of variants of these online. History and Recipe in English here

Monday, 9 September 2019

UPDATED "A Film for children... Perhaps." UK's channel 4 and the curious history of Svankmajer's Alice.


Image result for Alice 1988

Recently re-reading Clare Kitson's essay on the 1988 surrealist adaptation of AAIW, Alice, I was struck by a rather unusual section.

Kitson was a commissioning editor for animation at UK TV's channel 4 in the late 80s, where she oversaw part of the funding for Jan Svankmajer's Alice.

Due to pressure from the then Czech government, as his short films had grown increasingly political, svankmajer had sought out international money to fund Alice

Amazingly Kitson notes that "channel 4 boldly signed the deal, comitting £70,000... in the full knowledge that.... the film may not even get made"

Here's where the story becomes curiouser and curiouser. The other commissioner of the film, German TV channel Hessischer Rundfunk, had offered up the money from the children's department. Yet Svankmajer's film is absolutely not for children.

Image result for Alice 1988

To solve this, a strange compromise was struck. Channel 4 would show the film in full at midnight, in keeping with their late night offerings which had a reputation for being unusual or in some way controversial.

The film would also be cut into 6 episodes and shown to a family audience over the Christmas holidays. 

"the film was sold as a six-episode serial as well as a feature film. Both versions have been aired on Channel 4." (Animesuperhero) 

Channel 4 worked with the ITC (UK TV content regulators, now called ofcom) to cut any content which was deemed unsuitable for a young audience. This would have likely been a mammoth task.

Image result for Alice 1988

What was cut for this version? Clare Kitson remembers that "the nails in the pot of jam (during the rabbit hole scene) were removed"

Finding any record of this cut version is nigh on impossible.  Sadly there appears to be no real record of this except for Clare Kitson's essay for the BFI.

I would honestly love to find this cut version. It sounds fascinating! 

UPDATE 6/9/10:

I have managed to find a TV Schedule for December 1989 which confirms that yes, the 6 part vesrion does indeed exist.





A further look into the BFI archives reveals 3 tapes, one stated as with voiceover at the beginning and end. It also has a runtime of 13 minutes, which is plausible for this cut version.

Saturday, 1 June 2019

ENDLESS LIST OF FAVOURITE ADAPTATIONS: 1988 JAN SVANKMAJER










tylermkw:
“ Alice (1988)
”








undiaungato:
“ Něco z Alenky/Alice (1988) | Jan Svankmajer
”

In London on the 11th of May? There’s a screening of Jan Svankmajer’s Alice at Depford Cinema!
Book HERE.
“a memorably bizarre and disturbing screen version of Lewis Carroll’s novel ‘Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’ by master stop-motion surrealist...





ENDLESS LIST OF FAVOURITE ADAPTATIONS: 1988 JAN SVANKMAJER

As in the book, the trip down the rabbit hole (or drawer, in this case) is a dream, but whereas the English lass’ adventures are the product of a pleasant daytime riverbank reverie, the Czech girl’s dream contains uncomfortable elements of nightmare, as if she’d fallen asleep on a hard floor with her back pressed against the spokes of a wooden chair (she has)

- 366 weird movies on Alice (1988) by Jan Svankmajer