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The production of Czech animation began in the 1920s. Czech animated production from the 1920s to 1945 was created primarily as advertisements for products and as works for children, with the earliest Czech animation being Bohuslav Šula's unfinished 1920 film Broučci, an adaptation of the classic children's book of the same name by Jan Karafiát. [6]
The Czech Year: Jiří Trnka: Family Film: 75 Minutes: The first full-length film by Trnka Legenda o sv. Prokopu: Jiří Trnka: Fantasy: 10 Minutes: 1948: 1949: The Devil's Mill: Jiří Trnka: Fairy Tale: 21 Minutes: The Emperor's Nightingale: Jiří Trnka: Fairy Tale: 72 Minutes: Story of the Bass Cello: Jiří Trnka: Romantic: 13 Minutes ...
The list of Czech films is a list of films made in the Czech lands from 1898 to the present. After 1930 some were with Czech sound, and after 1947 some were in colour ...
The Czech Year AKA A Treasury of Fairy-tales [7] Czechoslovakia: Puppet 75 1949 The Emperor's Nightingale [8] Czechoslovakia Puppet 72 Adventures of Esparadrapo [9] Spain: Puppet 60 1950 Prince Bayaya [10] Czechoslovakia Puppet 87 1952 The Treasure of Bird Island [11] Czechoslovakia Puppet 77 1953 Old Czech Legends [12] Czechoslovakia Puppet 91 ...
In contemporary societies, the appropriateness of childhood nudity in various situations is controversial, with many differences in behavior worldwide. Depending upon conceptions of childhood innocence and sexuality in general, societies may regard social nudity before puberty as normal, as acceptable in particular situations such as same-sex groups, or unacceptable.
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government for depicting three people orphaned by political violence and trying to mentally survive, despite not being free. [120] 1969–1989 Larks on a String: Banned until the fall of the Communist government in 1989. [126] [127] 1970 Hlídač (Prison Guard) Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government ...
Večerníček (meaning "little bedtime story" Czech and Slovak) is a television program for children in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. It has been broadcast regularly for over 50 years. Before the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, two versions – one in Czech and one in Slovak – were aired in the respective parts of Czechoslovakia.
Canadian-Czech coproduction Ucho: Karel Kachyňa: Jiřina Bohdalová, Radoslav Brzobohatý: drama: the film was banned by communist censorship before its staging in 1969, so the premiere was in 1990 Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (Valerie a tyden divu) Jaromil Jires: Jaroslava Schallerová, Helena Anyžková: fairy tale, horror