The Blacksmith of Lešetín

Country

Czechoslovakia

Copyright

1924

Production year

1923—1924

Premiere

27 February 1925

Runtime

80 min

Category

film

Genre

drama

Typology

featuretheatrical distributionlong

Original title

Lešetínský kovář

Czech title

Lešetínský kovář

English title

The Blacksmith of Lešetín

Summary

In 1921, screenwriter and director Rudolf Měšťák (1878–1946) got the rights to rewrite Svatopluk Čech's literary work into a film script. He was supposed to start with the production, but the project was stopped in the second half of 1923. The following year, Ferry Seidl (1881–1939) took over the work on the film. Seidl also financially supported the film’s production. – The Blacksmith of Lešetín, based on the Lomikar Kleiner’s script, was released in cinemas in February 1925. From critics at the time received the film rather negative reviews, but the film was more popular with the audience in smaller cinemas. Criticisms in the press mainly concerned poor directing and inexperienced actors. The plot of the film remained mostly faithful to the subject, although the authors did not hesitate to include special features in the form of ideas and visions of individual characters. An example is the scene with Jan Žižka and his followers when the blacksmith and the other villagers are getting ready to resist. The cinematography of Svatopluk Innemann and Tommy Falley-Novotný is also worth mentioning, skillfully working with lyrical natural motifs and scenery. – Already at the beginning of the 1920s, Ivan Olbracht took the opportunity to adapt The Blacksmith of Lešetín for cinema. His synopsis, which he later developed into a full-fledged literary script during the protectorate era, aimed to make The Blacksmith of Lešetín the first Czech revolutionary film. However, Olbracht's version was never filmed.

Synopsis

A wealthy man arrives from abroad to the Czech hamlet of Lešetín and buys up all the land. First to sell is the peasant farmer Vávra, the other villagers follow suit. On the land he has bought, the wealthy man builds a factory and the village becomes crowded with factory workers who have come from outside to work. The rich factory owner is now in possesion of almost all the land by now. One of the few who did not sell his family estate is the blacksmith. However, the rich man gradually destroys his trade and the blacksmith is forced to dismiss his aprentice, Václav, who is in love with his daughter Liduška. Václav leaves for the city to try and find work. The blacksmith is now very poor and the workshop has to be sold in an auction. Only now do the villagers rise up in rebellion and, during scuffles, the blacksmith is injured. Václav returns home with good news. With the money he has earned he has bought back all the land forcing the factory owner to move away once and for all. The injured blacksmith blesses Liduška and Václav as he lays dying in his daughter's arms.

Note

Director Rudolf Měšťák started to shoot the film in 1923. The project was stopped and the preserved film was finished a year later.

Cast

František V. Kučera

kovář z Lešetína

Marie Jakšová

kovářova dcera Lidunka

Jiří Hron

kovářský učeň Václav, Lidunčin milý

Nora Ferry

Baruška

E. Lízner

Joza

Luigi Hofman

cizácký továrník

Eduard Ševčík

správce u továrníka

Antonín Meisner

továrníkův tajemník

Ferry Seidl

správcův společník

Běla Kleinerová

vdova po dělníkovi

Svatopluk Innemann

německý kazatel

Crew and creators

Based on

Svatopluk Čech (Lešetínský kovář – báseň)

Screenplay

Lomikar Kleiner

Production info

Original Title

Lešetínský kovář

Czech Title

Lešetínský kovář

English Title

The Blacksmith of Lešetín

Category

film

Typology

featuretheatrical distribution

Genre

drama

Origin country

Czechoslovakia

Copyright

1924

Production Year

1923—1924

Production specifications

date of censorship 5 November 1924

Premiere

premiere 27 February 1925 /unsuitable for youths/ (kino Alma /2 týdny/, Praha)

Production

Ferry Seidl

Copyright Holders

Národní filmový archiv

Studio

Vídeň

Distribution

Svetofilm

Technical info

Duration typology

feature film

Duration in minutes

80 min

Original length in metres

2 280 meters

Distribution carrier

35mm

Aspect ratio

1:1,33

Colour

black & white

Sound

silent

Versions

Czech

Dialogue languages

without dialogue

Subtitles languages

without subtitles

Intertitles languages

Czech

Opening/End credits languages

Czech