Distant Journey Explained

Distant Journey
Director:Alfréd Radok
Narrator:Václav Voska
Starring:Blanka Waleská
Otomar Krejča
Music:Jiří Sternwald
Cinematography:Josef Střecha
Editing:Jiřina Lukešová
Studio:Československý státní film
Runtime:108 minutes
Country:Czechoslovakia
Language:Czech

Distant Journey (Czech: '''Daleká cesta''') is a Czech Holocaust film directed by Alfréd Radok and released in 1949, not long after World War II. Radok uses experimental cinematography, blending historic footage of the Nazis with a fictional love story between a Jewish woman and her Gentile husband.

Soon after the film's release, Stalinist censorship was implemented in Czechoslovakia. The film was not allowed to have a premiere in Prague. It was only shown in small theatres outside of Prague until it was banned completely.[1]

Summary

Distant Journey follows Hana, a Jewish eye doctor who falls in love and marries a Gentile named Toník. Their simple love story becomes a nightmare when the government begins the systematized extermination of the Jews. Hana's family is transported to Theresienstadt, and the romance becomes a struggle for survival.

Radok never shows blood or lets a gun fire in his story, but the historic footage he integrates into the film achieves a sense of terror. Newsreel footage and clips from Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will show Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels, and other Nazi leaders reading speeches while a pile of dead nude bodies on the grounds of a concentration camp enforce the atmosphere of the Holocaust. While the historic war-time footage is shown, the previous scene of the feature film is shrunk to the lower right hand corner of the screen, a picture-in-picture effect comparing the wider global conflict to the more immediate effects on the story's central characters.

The slow spread of anti-Semitism that led to the deportation and murder of the Jews is played out in the film. For example, in 1941 Jews were no longer allowed to go to the theater in Prague. Dressed in stunning attire, the happy couple are just about to leave for the theater when they receive this foreboding news from Hana's dejected father. In this way, Radok feeds his audience the history of the war through a personal and easily digested narrative.

The film is full of symbolic cinematography. For example, when a minor character, Professor Reiter, commits suicide, strange camera angles show the old man sitting in his apartment, his open window, the cobblestone street far below, and the stopped hands on a clock. When shrill screams echo from the street and the apartment is empty, the audience is to assume the awful truth.

Reception

In the Village Voice J. Hoberman called it a "masterpiece", comparing Radok to Orson Welles[2] New York Times critic Bosley Crowther described it as "the most brilliant, the most horrifying film on the Nazi's persecution of the Jews that this reviewer has yet seen".[3] The film is applauded for both its expressionist cinematography and historical relevance, being one of the first films to confront the Holocaust, only three years after it occurred.

After being banned in Czechoslovakia for forty years, the movie reemerged after the Velvet Revolution for a 1991 television premiere, and was hailed as a masterpiece by local critics. In 1998 poll of 55 Czech and Slovak film critics and publicists Distant Journey was voted 6th best Czechoslovak movie of all time.

Trivia

Footage from Distant Journey appears in Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film A Clockwork Orange. Kubrick incorporated the shots of children playing amidst rubble into his film.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Living with the Long Journey: Alfréd Radok's Daleká cesta. Cieslar . Jiří . Central Europe Review. 2008-12-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20090212094306/http://www.ce-review.org/01/20/kinoeye20_cieslar.html. 2009-02-12. dead.
  2. Web site: Czech, Please . 21 November 2006 . Hoberman. J.. Village Voice.
  3. News: FOREIGN ENTRIES; The Czech Film 'Distant Journey,' and The Italian 'Difficult Years' Creative Film Hot Potato . 10 September 1950 . Crowther. Bosley. New York Times.