DAISIES (1966)
Friday, October 11 | 7 pm
Director: VERA CHYTILOVA
Country of Origin: Czech Republic
Language: Czechia
Runtime: 75
“If the entire world is bad, why shouldn’t we be?”
Adopting this insolent attitude as their guiding philosophy, a pair of hedonistic young women (Ivana Karbanová and Jitka Cerhová), both named Marie, embark on a gleefully debauched odyssey of gluttony, giddy destruction, and anti-patriarchal resistance, in which nothing is safe from their nihilistic pursuit of pleasure. But what happens when the fun is over?
Matching her anarchic message with an equally radical aesthetic, director Vera Chytilová, with the close collaboration of cinematographer Jaroslav Kucera, unleashes an optical storm of fluctuating film stocks, kaleidoscopic montages, cartoonish stop-motion cutouts, and surreal costumes designed by Ester Krumbachová, who also cowrote the script. The result is Daisies, the most defiant provocation of the Czechoslovak New Wave, an exuberant call to rebellion aimed squarely at those who uphold authoritarian oppression in any form.
"The Czech New Wave is perhaps best known for wry, poignant tales like Milos Forman’s Loves of a Blonde and Jiri Menzel’s Closely Watched Trains, but the extraordinary 1966 film Daisies represents an exhilarating, lesser-known strain of the Czech New Wave,” wrote Nicola Rapold in The New York Times. “This radically mischievous work was the second feature of the wave’s sole female director, Vera Chytilova. In her visually arresting, capricious film — full of colorful experiments, dazzling collage effects and surrealist antics — two dangerously bored young women have anarchic fun in a series of loosely connected episodes."