Labyrinth (1991 film)

Labyrinth is a 1991 German–Czech drama film directed by Jaromil Jireš. The film depicts Maximilian Schell playing himself investigating the life and influences of Franz Kafka played by Christopher Chaplin, and marked Jireš' return to Czech New Wave after having worked with television and documentaries for a number of years.[2]

Labyrinth
Directed byJaromil Jireš
Written byHans-Jörg Weyhmüller
Alex Koenigsmark
Jaromil Jireš
StarringMaximilian Schell
Christopher Chaplin
Vlastimil Brodský
Music byLuboš Fišer
CinematographyIvan Vojnár
Edited byAlois Fischarek
Release date
  • 1991 (1991)
Running time
90 minutes[1]
CountryGermany & Czechoslovakia
LanguageCzech

First screened on 22 October 1991 at Laemmle Monica 2 in Los Angeles,[3] Labyrinth received the Critic's Choice at the 1992 American Film Institute International Film Festival.[4][5]

Cast

gollark: PalaialdllfflogodoS, greetings.
gollark: An actual employee? No. We'll use HTech™ Personality Constructs™.
gollark: Also, to help with sleep monitoring, it will ship with an optional EEG headset.
gollark: A what? No, this is the osmarksßßsmartwatch™.
gollark: Anyway, the osmarksßßsmartwatch™ will also incorporate the latest sensor technology, like an accelerometer, a compass for some reason also, a thermometer, a barometer, a humidity sensor, a light level/UV/IR sensor, an ultrasonic distance sensor, a regular microphone, an irregular microphone, lidar, radar, an infrared thing, two incompatible software defined radios, that one weird IC some company made for some reason to detect lightning strikes nearby, a spectrometer, LEDs abused as photodetectors, a DVD player (DVDs must be shrunken or trimmed before use), a portable DNA sequencer, a multi-axis Hall effect sensor, phased array satellite transceivers, atmospheric bismuth concentration meters, an apiometer, a mouse trackball, an optical mouse (miniaturized), a full 22-key keyboard, 3 dedicated hardware buttons, a fan noise detector and estimator, and a blood oxygen concentration reader.

References

  1. Tom Milne; John Pym (2007). Time Out Film Guide. 15. Penguin Books. pp. 633–.
  2. Jessica Winter; Lloyd Hughes; Richard Armstrong (27 September 2007). The Rough Guide to Film. Rough Guides Limited. pp. 257–. ISBN 978-1-84836-125-6.
  3. The Hollywood Reporter. 18-33. 319. Wilkerson Daily Corporation. 1991. pp. 77–.
  4. "AFI FESTIVAL : A 'Great Day' With Some Great Films". latimes. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  5. "CRITICS' PICKS". Washington Post. 14 June 1992. Retrieved 21 May 2016.


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