The Way to Paradise (film) explained

The Way to Paradise
Native Name:
Director:Mario Fanelli
Starring:
Cinematography:Tomislav Pinter
Editing:Radojka Tanhofer
Studio:
Runtime:96 minutes[1]

The Way to Paradise (Croatian: Put u raj) is a 1970 Croatian film directed by Mario Fanelli and written by Miroslav Krleža, starring Boris Buzančić and Ljuba Tadić.[2] Krleža based the script on his own novellas The Cricket under a Waterfall and The Finale. It was the first film adaptation of his literary work, and the only one he was personally involved with.[1] [3]

Plot

A man dies and goes to heaven, escaping the predicament of the modern civilisation. However, once there, he encounters similar people and situations.

Cast

Reception

The film was poorly received at the time of its release.[4] Croatian cinema historian Ivo Škrabalo described it as a film where "Krležian rhetoric was not completed by suggestive development of the plot, so that one could hear only an outpouring of words on the screen, without connected connotations found in literature."[1] The film did not enter competition at the 1971 Pula Film Festival.[1]

Krleža disagreed with the critics of The Way to Paradise who had argued that extensive "meditative dialogue" dominated the film, maintaining his belief that "the human word in a film is equivalent to camera" and that without it, film is "merely commedia dell'arte and nothing else". Nevertheless, he was disappointed by the reception, and denied permissions for film adaptations of his works for the rest of his life.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ARHiNET - Put u raj (komad) . . 8 August 2018 . hr.
  2. Web site: HRVATSKI DUGOMETRAŽNI FILMOVI 1944. – 2006. GODINA . . 8 August 2018 . Zagreb . hr.
  3. Web site: Krležijana.
  4. Web site: Uvanović . Željko . Fear of numerous embarrassments . Croatian Scientific Bibliography . . 8 August 2018 . hr . 1 January 2008. 324–343.