“A great documentary could be made about the Kramný case. But it’s not the Kramný case,” says Vítek about Petr Hátle’s new true crime docuseries. “It’s a series done in the worst possible way – talking heads with nothing to say and a few repetitive illustrative shots of Hurghada, which you’ll hate after this act. I had no idea that you could put so many looks at the door of one room into one series,” he adds.
Video of Kauza Kramný (2024) HD trailer #truecrime #Voyo
Aleš liked M. Night Shyamalan’s new film Past much better. “It has an excellent first third, then it starts to rub off and the third is quite silly, although a bit admittedly,” he says. He appreciates how the director used the environment of arena concerts and Josh Hartnett’s performance, but claims that “with Shyamalan, it’s always trap after trap. And usually the director himself falls into that trap.”
Video of Trap | Official Trailer
The only film that, according to Aleš and Tonda, is “totally coleslaw”, i.e. absolutely great, is the independent Canadian horror film In a Violent Nature. “It’s a film for geeks,” boasts Tonda. Director Chris Nash has turned the principle of Friday the 13th upside down, so this time we watch the whole carnage from the killer’s point of view. “There are extremely bloody and imaginative murders, but at the same time it’s a soft affair, where the creator was inspired by the films of Gus Van Sant and slow cinema,” adds Tonda about the meditative horror for sadomasochists.
Video of In a Violent Nature – Official Trailer | HD | IFC Films
The sixth infusion is also tasty Cobra teas still as good? Martin Pleštil says of Šimon Holé’s new film “Hello, Welcome“, or “Go away, Satan”? It deserves a Polish Tarantino movie Kos surname Przystojniaczek Unchained? Help SpongeBob in the pants is the sun, or is it Rescue Still Life Bikini in vain? Jaws – coleslaw for your hair and ears.