- Nacimiento
- Fallecimiento
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Otakar Vávra
Otakar Vávra (28 February 1911 – 15 September 2011) was a Czech film director, screenwriter and pedagogue.
Vávra attended universities in Brno and Prague, where he studied architecture. During 1929–30, while still a student, he participated in the making of a handful of documentaries and wrote movie scripts. In 1931, he produced the experimental film Světlo proniká tmou. The first movie he directed was 1937's Panenství.
His 1938 film The Merry Wives was praised in Variety for "first-rate direction, a salty yarn and elaborate production effort", even though it had undergone certain cuts because it was considered too "ribald" by American censors.
Vávra was a member of the Communist Party from 1945 to 1989. After the Communists seized power in 1948, Vávra adapted quickly to the new political climate and produced films praising the current regime and supporting the new, official interpretation of the past.
In the 1950s he filmed the "Hussite Trilogy", one of his most famous works, consisting of Jan Hus (1954), Jan Žižka (1955) and Against All (1957).[2]
In the 1960s, Vávra made his most celebrated films Zlatá reneta (1965), Romance for Bugle (1966) and Witchhammer (1969). Romance for Bugle was entered into the 5th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Special Silver Prize.
Como dirección
Moje Praha
Evropa tančila valčík
Veronika
Oldřich a Božena
Komediant
Putování Jana Amose
Temné slunce
Příběh lásky a cti
Osvobození Prahy
Sokolovo
Dny zrady
Martillo para las brujas
Třináctá komnata
Romance pro křídlovku
Zlatá reneta
Horoucí srdce
Noční host
Srpnová neděle
Policejní hodina
Národní umělec Zdeněk Štěpánek
První parta
Občan Brych
Proti všem
Jan Žižka
Jan Hus
Nástup
Láska
Němá barikáda
Krakatit
Předtucha