Whoops (film) explained

Whoops
Native Name:HOPPÁ!
Director:Gyula Maár
Producer:Sándor Simó, Ödön Pál
Starring:Mari Törőcsik, Dezső Garas
Cinematography:János Vecsernyés
Editing:Zsuzsa Jámbor
Studio:SuperPlan Film
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Hungary
Language:Hungarian

Whoops (Hungarian: Hoppá) is a 1993 Hungarian comedy film directed by Gyula Maár. It was entered into the 43rd Berlin International Film Festival.[1]

Elementary satire on the Hungarian regime change. Every sentence is spot on.

Even though Ede and Kati hated the previous system, they can't help themselves in the new one. In addition, a woman named Elvira turns up and tells him that she has a forty-one-year-old son, whose father is Ede.

Set in the nineties, the main characters Ede, the husband (Dezső Garas), and Kati, the wife (Mari Törőcsik), are in their sixties. They spent their youth and working years under the Kádár regime, where they were assigned the role of the "patsy", and this has not changed since the regime change. The flag still flies for the former cadre brother-in-law. Their usual daily arguments and grumbling continue as they have done for decades. Ede wants to move to the countryside to cut costs, where Kati has no desire to go and is considering divorce. Can decades of living together hold this disintegrating relationship together?

Excellent acting enriches the film.

This was the first feature film in the Hungarian feature film industry after the change of regime to be made by a private production company, SuperPlan Film. The producer and owner of the company is Ödön Pál.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Berlinale: 1993 Programme . 31 May 2011 . berlinale.de.