Résumés(1)

Trying to outsmart Fortune doesn't pay! Filip is a chimney sweep's son who was born unlucky. When he's at his lowest point, he meets the beautiful Hana, who is imprisoned by the brute Karlos. In an effort to gain her love - and also to rid himself of his bad luck - Filip sets out into the world. A fateful encounter with a pathological liar awaits him; he's a man who's lied so much that he doesn't even know his own name, going by the name of Whoever. Strangely enough, with the help of this hilarious confederate, Filip finds his beloved Hana and enters into an uneven struggle. (Zlín Film Festival)

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Critiques (2)

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Frk and Bohdalka got to me - similar morbidity is noticeably missing here. Fear is alternated by a television routine with shots that sympathetically seek the big screen. Sometimes it's a pleasant spectacle with poetics. Trojan succeeded in the Uncle Pepin and Jack Sparrow mix, an ethereal loving couple with a traditional head shaker. Oh, the Czech Hanas. The role of Štěstěny monotonously outside of good and evil (and the whole film). Otherwise, after a while, it’s a painless TV show, where everything is just right and it can be watched without the assistance of a psychiatrist and pathologist. ()

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Sadly, Jiří Strach is no longer a guarantee of at least a little bit of good spectacle for me. I was quite looking forward to Lucky Loser, because the outline of the story looked more than appealing. But a better screenwriter probably should have taken it on. Marek Epstein was not able to write a good joke this time (he can truly do without the cheap humor like the visit to the blacksmith, the "second coffin" or the stepping into...) or a sympathetic character (the liar was saved only by Ivan Trojan), he completely lacked ideas (while the combination of the characters of a notorious liar and a sickly loser promised so much fun), he used the oldest situations and lines possible ("Am I in heaven? Are you not an angel?") and only once in a while did he manage to create a "catchphrase", which was again awkward. As for the actors, the protagonist was absolutely impossible, his beloved got no opportunity to shine or fade, the other members of Strach's favorite ensemble (only Viktor Preiss was missing) got mostly miserable dialogues. This is not the second Angel of the Lord - the director and especially the screenwriter were either very unlucky or they just blew it. ()

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