The Glembays

The Glembays (Croatian: Glembajevi) is a 1988 Yugoslav / Croatian film directed by Antun Vrdoljak starring Mustafa Nadarević and Ena Begović.[1] The film is an adaptation of Miroslav Krleža's 1929 play Messrs. Glembay (Gospoda Glembajevi)[2] and was produced by Televizija Zagreb and Jadran Film.[1]

The Glembays
Directed byAntun Vrdoljak
Written byMiroslav Krleža (play)
Antun Vrdoljak
StarringMustafa Nadarević
Ena Begović
Tonko Lonza
Bernarda Oman
Žarko Potočnjak
Music byArsen Dedić
CinematographyVjekoslav Vrdoljak
Edited byDamir German
Production
company
Jadran Film
Televizija Zagreb
Release date
1988
Running time
120 minutes
CountryYugoslavia
LanguageSerbo-Croatian

Plot

It is a period piece set in 1913 in Zagreb (which was at the time part of Austria-Hungary) and follows members of the fictional Glembay family, headed by Ignjat Glembay (Tonko Lonza), a prominent banker, and his second wife baroness Castelli (Ena Begović). Eleven years after his mother's suicide, Leone Glembay (Mustafa Nadarević) returns from abroad to his family home in Zagreb. He is haunted by depressing memories, particularly by thoughts of his deceased mother, his sister who committed suicide, and the Baroness Castelli, his father's second wife. The only member of his family that Leone confides in is Beatrice (Bernarda Oman), his brother Ivan's widow, who in the meantime became a nun and renamed herself Angelika. Leone witnesses omnipresent hypocrisy in the family and is repulsed by the criminal means through which his family became rich. Ultimately, Leone confronts his father and the baroness.

Cast

Reception

In 1999, a poll of Croatian film fans found it to be one of the best Croatian films ever made.[3]

Awards

The film won three Golden Arena awards at the 1988 Pula Film Festival, including Best Actor (Mustafa Nadarević), Best Supporting Actress (Ena Begović) and Costimography (Ika Škomrlj).[4] However, Ena Begović refused to accept her award on the grounds that her part was in fact a leading role.[4]

Trivia

The actor Zvonimir Rogoz, the doyen of Croatian cinematography, was 101 when he made this movie.

gollark: You can't call a system, the whole point of which is to organize people, "perfect", if it does not actually work on people.
gollark: Sinthorion said it was twice as good for 10 hours to be spent on work than for 5 hours to be spent on the same thing.
gollark: That's not how perfection works; a "perfect" system should work on actual people.
gollark: It's WORSE, because someone is spending 5 hours more on a thing than they should.
gollark: NO! Of course not.

References

  1. "Glembajevi (1988)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
  2. "Glembajevi". hrfilm.hr (in Croatian). Croatian Film Association. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  3. ""Tko pjeva, zlo ne misli" najbolji hrvatski film svih vremena!". Slobodna Dalmacija (in Croatian). 1999-11-28. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
  4. "35. Pulski filmski festival (1988)" (in Croatian). Pula Film Festival. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
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