Prague (2006 film)

Prague (Danish: Prag) is a 2006 Danish film written and directed by Ole Christian Madsen, starring Mads Mikkelsen, Stine Stengade and Jana Plodková.

Prague
Film poster
DanishPrag
Directed byOle Christian Madsen
Produced byMorten Kaufmann
Written by
Starring
Music byJonas Struck
CinematographyJørgen Johansson
Edited bySøren B. Ebbe
Production
company
Distributed byNordisk Film
Release date
  • 12 September 2006 (2006-09-12) (TIFF)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryDenmark
LanguageDanish

Plot

Married couple Christoffer and Maja have travelled to Prague to collect and bring home the body of Christoffer's father for burial in Denmark. When they have checked into their hotel, Christoffer visits the hospital mortuary. Having been estranged from his father since childhood, he views the corpse dispassionately and leaves with a cardboard box containing pyjamas and other possessions including a mobile phone. To Cristoffer's surprise, the phone rings and he finds himself speaking to a lawyer who is handling the estate—and who later turns out to be the father's gay lover. Returning to his hotel room, he confronts Maja with his knowledge of a clandestine affair she has been engaged in. She confesses to this but has not lost her love for her husband who, she claims, had grown apart from her.

Christoffer learns from the solicitor that most of his father's assets have been committed to outstanding debts, but that he has inherited an unencumbered house. When he goes to inspect the substantial rural cottage, he meets the beautiful young housekeeper, Alena, who lives there with a daughter and works as a nightclub singer. They soon form a rapport, despite the fact that she speaks only Czech while he is limited to Danish and English. She is unable to answer his question about exactly what business his dad was in. Before long, he learns from the lawyer that his father ran "a dating bureau for older homosexuals". As other secrets emerge, tensions build in the various characters and relationships, and are resolved in a poignant conclusion.

Cast

gollark: And practicality somewhat.
gollark: Yes it does. I program for funlolz.
gollark: Rob Pike even attacked *syntax highlighting* for being childish.
gollark: I mean, they're gaining generics *now*, very late, but they just have this apious attitude of disregarding every development in computing in the last 50 years and claiming it's because programmers can't be trusted to use them right.
gollark: lol no generics


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