Vlny
- 2024
- 2h 11min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
1.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un registro comprometedor puede cambiar la historia. ¿Sacrificarás a tu familia por tu país?Un registro comprometedor puede cambiar la historia. ¿Sacrificarás a tu familia por tu país?Un registro comprometedor puede cambiar la historia. ¿Sacrificarás a tu familia por tu país?
- Premios
- 20 premios ganados y 17 nominaciones en total
Tatiana Pauhofová
- Vera Stovícková
- (as Tána Pauhofová)
Tomas Mastalir
- Karel Hoffman
- (as Tomás Mastalír)
Tomás Weber
- Holenda
- (as Tomás Hogh Weber)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Slightly hollywoodized account of the role of media, specifically radio broadcast, in bringing the scent of democracy into Czechoslovakia in 1968.
The focus of the story is on two brothers, one conformist and the other a revolting one. Their arc provides an anchor in everyday life - as opposed to the "collective hero" of the radio staff who are trying to get rid of the censorship and serve unbiased news - something unheard of at the time of socialist one official truth.
Most of the movie's impact emerges from the current political climate, the Ukraine war very close to Czechia/Slovakia. Are we destined to repeat history?
The focus of the story is on two brothers, one conformist and the other a revolting one. Their arc provides an anchor in everyday life - as opposed to the "collective hero" of the radio staff who are trying to get rid of the censorship and serve unbiased news - something unheard of at the time of socialist one official truth.
Most of the movie's impact emerges from the current political climate, the Ukraine war very close to Czechia/Slovakia. Are we destined to repeat history?
WAVES, known as VLNY in the Czech Republic, is a historical drama thriller based on true events from the late 1960s in what was then Czechoslovakia. A friend of mine saw this film and wanted me to check it out. Although the Czech Republic isn't known for its films, this received high praise and became the country's official Oscar submission. This movie covers the events that led to the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Soviet Union and its allies in Poland, Bulgaria, and Hungary. Czechoslovakia was going through a period of liberalization reforms in 1967 during a political period called Prague Spring, where they elected a reformer Alexander Dubcek. The Soviets feared Czechoslovakia would defect to NATO and that liberalization would extend throughout the Eastern Bloc, threatening their power. One of their first objectives was to seize Czechoslovak Radio and silence the airwaves. Czechoslovak Radio was pushing back against censorship and propaganda and promoting reformist ideas across Czechoslovakia. It also kept Czechoslovakians updated on the news and called for nonviolent resistance, threatening the invaders. A famous saying applies here: 'Control the information, and you control the people.' Although actual events inspired the story, its characters and plot are fictional. Several journalists are based on actual journalists from Czechoslovak Radio.
The Prague Spring push thrusts orphaned brothers Tomas and Pavel Havlik into the middle. Tomas initially wants no involvement in politics, but his teenage brother Pavel can't keep himself away from student protests. With his brother Pavel's safety reliant upon him, Tomas must make tough decisions. Tomas is a State Security (StB) agent, whose job is to check airwaves for intel. His director pressures him to join Czechoslovak Radio's journalist ranks as a technician to spy for StB. He agrees to join the team. Once he began working with the journalists, he recognized their care and love for their country. His conscience awakens, and he understands the gravity of his work.
WAVES is a decent movie that is easy to follow, even with English subtitles. The beginning starts at a slow pace, but its grip on you tightens. The directing, acting, tight editing, and production are skillfully handled. They built the 1960s atmosphere well and used contemporary music of the era (although I don't know Czech music). The faster pacing and filming style in the second hour keep you wondering what is coming next and hoping the Soviets don't get there in time. There are a few flaws, though. First, they needed to address the relevant ongoing global issues at the time better. These include the increased Cold War tensions, the responding Brezhnev Doctrine that justified the USSR's intervention throughout Eastern Europe, and the massive crackdown on protests in the USSR. Second, the flow connecting several scenes seemed odd. Finally, while important, Czechoslovak Radio's role seemed exaggerated in the film.
Would I recommend this? It's not a must-watch, but I suggest this film to those interested in learning about the threat Europe/the world faced from the communist Soviet Union. Also, the Soviets used the same false premise in 1968 that Russia used to invade Ukraine in 2022. As they say, history repeats itself. People often take the impact of journalists and reporters for granted. These are noble pursuits vital to civilization, and they often risk their lives courageously to bring information to the public. WAVES is worth watching once. My rating is 8/10.
*Any trivia facts were obtained from IMDB's trivia page and plot/basic history/name information from Wiki.
The Prague Spring push thrusts orphaned brothers Tomas and Pavel Havlik into the middle. Tomas initially wants no involvement in politics, but his teenage brother Pavel can't keep himself away from student protests. With his brother Pavel's safety reliant upon him, Tomas must make tough decisions. Tomas is a State Security (StB) agent, whose job is to check airwaves for intel. His director pressures him to join Czechoslovak Radio's journalist ranks as a technician to spy for StB. He agrees to join the team. Once he began working with the journalists, he recognized their care and love for their country. His conscience awakens, and he understands the gravity of his work.
WAVES is a decent movie that is easy to follow, even with English subtitles. The beginning starts at a slow pace, but its grip on you tightens. The directing, acting, tight editing, and production are skillfully handled. They built the 1960s atmosphere well and used contemporary music of the era (although I don't know Czech music). The faster pacing and filming style in the second hour keep you wondering what is coming next and hoping the Soviets don't get there in time. There are a few flaws, though. First, they needed to address the relevant ongoing global issues at the time better. These include the increased Cold War tensions, the responding Brezhnev Doctrine that justified the USSR's intervention throughout Eastern Europe, and the massive crackdown on protests in the USSR. Second, the flow connecting several scenes seemed odd. Finally, while important, Czechoslovak Radio's role seemed exaggerated in the film.
Would I recommend this? It's not a must-watch, but I suggest this film to those interested in learning about the threat Europe/the world faced from the communist Soviet Union. Also, the Soviets used the same false premise in 1968 that Russia used to invade Ukraine in 2022. As they say, history repeats itself. People often take the impact of journalists and reporters for granted. These are noble pursuits vital to civilization, and they often risk their lives courageously to bring information to the public. WAVES is worth watching once. My rating is 8/10.
*Any trivia facts were obtained from IMDB's trivia page and plot/basic history/name information from Wiki.
10v-56289
The waves, or vlny is a really great movie. I am sure that many people may find a lot of mistakes there, but I am simply a fan of this kind of format.
Basicaly, it is a fictional story set in a real historical events with real people. To foreigners these people will be mostly unknown, just like the event, but to me it is always interesting to watch how people behave in these situations that actually happened. The decisions they were facing, the joy and stress they had.. I had to pause the movie many times to actually google the real story of the people from the group.
I have many times passed the building where this event happened and I have always admired this event.
The movie starts pretty slow. And in fact first one and half hour is the "boring introduction", but I must say that I even got fully caught into this part of the movie. The remaining 30 minutes was dramatised, but not into the extremely unrealistic superhero last second drama nonsense.
After all, this movie is simply a great fit for me. The actors played very well, the soundtrack, everything was simply super interesting to me. The only one thing I could criticise was the fact that they did say what is real, what was fictional... Simply at the end of the movie a short description could be added like with many other movies.
Basicaly, it is a fictional story set in a real historical events with real people. To foreigners these people will be mostly unknown, just like the event, but to me it is always interesting to watch how people behave in these situations that actually happened. The decisions they were facing, the joy and stress they had.. I had to pause the movie many times to actually google the real story of the people from the group.
I have many times passed the building where this event happened and I have always admired this event.
The movie starts pretty slow. And in fact first one and half hour is the "boring introduction", but I must say that I even got fully caught into this part of the movie. The remaining 30 minutes was dramatised, but not into the extremely unrealistic superhero last second drama nonsense.
After all, this movie is simply a great fit for me. The actors played very well, the soundtrack, everything was simply super interesting to me. The only one thing I could criticise was the fact that they did say what is real, what was fictional... Simply at the end of the movie a short description could be added like with many other movies.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOfficial submission of Czech Republic for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 97th Academy Awards in 2025.
- Versiones alternativasThe version released in French cinemas under the title 'Radio Prague - Les ondes de la révolte' is about 15 minutes shorter than the original Czech release.
- Bandas sonorasNa tenkom lade
Written by Matus Vallo & Jana Kirschner
Performed by Juraj Benetin & Jana Kirschner
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 8,402,908
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 11 minutos
- Color
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