Kolya

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Kolya

original movie poster
Directed by Jan Svěrák
Produced by Eric Abraham
Jan Svěrák
Written by Zdeněk Svěrák
Starring Zdeněk Svěrák
Andrei Chalimon
Libuše Šafránková
Music by Ondřej Soukup
Bedřich Smetana
Cinematography Vladimír Smutný
Editing by Alois Fišárek
Distributed by Space Films
Release date(s) France May, 1996 (premiere at Cannes)
Czech Republic 15 May, 1996
United States 24 January 1997
Australia 3 April 1997
United Kingdom 9 May 1997
Running time 105 min.
Language Czech, Slovak and Russian
IMDb profile
For the Genii commander from Stargate Atlantis, see Acastus Kolya.

Kolya is an award-winning 1996 Czech film drama about a man whose life is reshaped in an unexpected way.

[edit] Synopsis

František Louka, a middle-aged Czechoslovakian man dedicated to bachelorhood and the pursuit of women, is a concert cellist who has been blacklisted by the Communist government authority. He is struggling to eke out a living, playing funerals at the Prague crematorium and almost oblivious to the atmosphere of political anxiety that surrounds him as the Soviet empire begins to disintegrate. A friend offers him a chance to earn a great deal of money through a sham marriage to a Russian woman to save her from being deported. However, frightened that the authorities will discover their fraud, the woman flees to West Germany, leaving behind her Russian-speaking five-year-old son, Kolya, for the disgruntled Czech musician to look after. Gradually, a bond forms between Louka and Kolya.

[edit] Principal cast

Role Actor
Kolya Andrei Chalimon
Louka Zdeněk Svěrák
Klára Libuše Šafránková
Mr. Brož Ondřej Vetchý
Louka's mother Stella Zázvorková

[edit] Awards

This drama film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Preceded by:
Antonia's Line
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
1996
Succeeded by:
Character