Zátopek - David Ondříček
Transcription
Zátopek - David Ondříček
A NEW FILM BY DAVID ONDŘÍČEK zatopek_EN.indd 1 2/12/14 2:29:00 PM Emil Zatopek, from Collection of the National Museum in Prague; H7F 077844 2/12/14 2:29:01 PM zatopek_EN.indd 2 PRODUCER‘S STATEMENT The aim of the Zátopek project is to make a feature film about the greatest sportsman in the history of Czechoslovakia and one of the world’s all-time greatest sportsmen. The winner of four Olympic medals, three of which he earned in just a few days in Helsinki in 1952, Emil Zátopek is one of the greatest figures in the entire history of the Olympics, not just because of his performance, but above all thanks to his character. Through incredible hard work and new training methods, this man of average ability managed to beat the whole world, his big heart substituting for a lack of talent and elegance. We want to shoot our film in honour of a great man; as a tribute to the Olympic ideals, which have helped and continue to help people overcome harsh periods of repression in various countries; and in testimony of the noble battles of athletes in an era when financial motivation still counted for nothing. Today, when hundreds of millions of people around the world run every day, we present to them as a role model this man, who is described in every book on running as one of the world’s greatest runners. We believe, therefore, that everybody with an interest in sport will want to see this film. The entire concept of the project‘s development therefore takes an BUDGET 3.7 EUR million TIMELINE 2014 Financing, casting, work on screenplay 2015 Shooting 2015–2016 Post-production 2016 August, gala première at the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games unconventional path. The film is being made as “gift” from the Czech Olympic Committee to the International Olympic movement and the première is therefore planned to take place at the next Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. The ZÁTOPEK film project has arisen through the close cooperation of the Czech Olympic Committee, Czech Television and, last but not least, Emil Zátopek’s wife, Dana Zátopková. Kryštof Mucha, David Ondříček producers STRANA / 3 zatopek_EN.indd 3 2/12/14 2:29:01 PM late, soon managed to leave competitors in his wake thanks to unconventional training methods. Incidentally, there can hardly have been a previous case in elite sport of the first runner outrunning the last by an entire lap. In total, he set thirteen 1,000m world records and five 1,500m records. He became the first person in the world to complete the 10km in less than 29 minutes and the 20km in under an hour. At the Olympic Games in Helsinki in 1952 – at the age of 30, when the majority of runners are approaching the end of their careers – he astounded the whole world of sport when he took gold in the 5,000m, the 10,000m and the marathon, a discipline in which he was participating for the first time ever. In each of those disciplines he simultaneously set a new Olympic record. He showed that there is only one kind of running and if somebody genuinely masters it and understands it fully, it doesn’t matter what distance he has trained in. Emil Zatopek, from Collection of the National Museum in Prague; H7F 072228 WHO WAS EMIL ZATOPEK? When the US magazine Runner’s World compiled a list of the world’s greatest runners, the top names were those of especially brilliant men: in all cases, they were pioneers who, thanks to their exceptional performance, closely linked to no less fascinating life stories, demonstrated that if somebody has a strong enough will he can achieve virtually anything. Leonidas of Rhodes, born 188 BC, the most famous Greek Olympics runner, who at three games in a row won all three running disciplines, running two naked and one carrying a shield and wearing bronze armour. The American Jesse Owens, a legendary black runner who had known poverty in his early years and, in a period of racial segregation, was forced to run in exhibition races against horses and other animals. And finally Emil Zátopek, a total outsider from Czechoslovakia who accidentally discovered within himself an unknown talent and, despite starting to run very STRANA / 4 zatopek_EN.indd 4 2/12/14 2:29:02 PM zatopek_EN.indd 5 2/12/14 2:29:02 PM BRIEF SYNOPSIS “A RUNNER MUST RUN WITH DREAMS IN HIS HEART.” Place: the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. National pride has been severely undermined by the German occupation. In a strictly guarded regime, sport is virtually the only legal sphere in which it is possible to defy the Nazis. However, participating in sports in this period is not easy. Food supplies are scant and a top athlete gets the same amount of nutrition as any other citizen. But maybe that gives him the strength to fight. Emil Zátopek grows up during this time. This ordinary boy still has no idea that in a few years his athletic performance will astound the entire world. He doesn’t like sport. He has never excelled at it and as he is small with a squeaky voice, the boys in the village are constantly making fun of him. He’s not a real boy, he can’t even play football. He comes from a 10-member family, though of all the brothers he is neither the oldest (of whom their parents are proud) nor the youngest (whom they pamper). From a young age he tries to find some way to stop being a failure. He’s clever, so when he is accepted at the Baťa Industrial School in Zlín it looks like a place where he could achieve something. Even there, however, he can’t escape being judged physically. Athletics is blooming and teachers are furiously looking for new blood. Every year a run around the city, which is compulsory for students and school staff, is held in Zlín. Emil tries to get out of it, fearing further embarrassment. But in the end he is forced to take part. However, at the starting line desperation gives way to anger. “Who’s the fastest?” he asks the participants around him. They point forward: “Probably that guy. He’s an athlete.” Emil determines to keep up with the athlete. From the starting pistol, he sticks to him. Emil simply runs, taking nothing else in. Only two people reach the finish line: the favourite and Emil, the boy who hates sport. Everybody is surprised, nobody more than Emil himself. The winning feeling, hearing his name being chanted – he wants to experience that again. He begins training under one of the country’s top trainers at that time. Soon he is as good as the trainer. Emil enters the army and starts to run for the Dukla club. He never stops thinking and improving his training techniques. As he trains alone, frequently in a forest, he is lonely. At a track and field meet he gets to know Dana, a young javelin thrower. Their relationship deepens and climaxes at the London Olympics, where Emil triumphs in the 10,000m and takes the gold. The world discovers Zátopek. Emil and Dana marry. Emil is an international standard athlete. She is mesmerised by the atmosphere of the Olympics and sets her sights on the next Games in Helsinki. She has two years to prepare. Emil is constantly perfecting and intensifying his training. He even improves his condition at races when he comes up against various rivals, many of whom he knows and many of whom he later competes against in Finland. In addition, he is very popular there. Emil has never hidden his admiration for Norse runners and has studied their methods. At the Olympics he enters all three disciplines, though he has only been in training for the 5,000m, in which he finished second in London. He only signs up for the marathon for fun. He has never run one and would like to try it. As he has never competed in the category he has nothing to lose. In the end he wins the lot. He creates a gigantic international sensation. However, his enthusiasm is soon replaced by frustration. Everybody thinks that Emil is finished: it makes sense, as there is nothing greater that he could achieve. There is no reason for him to keep running. Emil himself doesn’t know what reason he has – and attempts to uncover why he still has that impulse within him. Bitterness is stirred in him by foreign press reports of upcoming young favourites and suggestions that Zátopek is bound to start losing. Most of the world expects nothing from him. The rest STRANA / 6 zatopek_EN.indd 6 2/12/14 2:29:03 PM expect him to lose. As a result of all of this, Emil really does lose several times. It is as if he has lost his goal. In addition, there has been more and more talk recently about the Soviet favourite, Kuts. Naturally, many sports writers and fans can’t help but compare him to Zátopek. Emil himself recalls how Kuts trod on his heel in their last race. But when he hears how the Soviet Union is loudly trumpeting their favourite, he again has a good reason to triumph. It’s not about coming first. He just wants to defeat Kuts. Emil sets his sights on a race in Bucharest. On just one rival. It’s hard to get into form for the race and training is painful. Recently he feels that his body is defying him. No matter how much they wish him well, everybody expects a Zátopek defeat. However, in the end he beats not only Kuts but the entire field. At the finish line he doesn’t keep running like before. He has to stop and get his breath back. He has to get to grips with what he has achieved in his mind. The wild cheering of the crowds is at the edge of his perception. It is his last great victory. This story gives the viewer a unique chance to see into a world that no longer exists: into the golden era of racing, into a period of pioneering runners and values such as honour, friendship and modesty. With Emil’s departure from the scene those times gradually came to an end. Even sport was later unable to resist influences at odds with the concept of fair play, which not only Zátopek but all other sportsmen then advocated vocally. During the Cold War, sport, like other fields, represented a power struggle and unnatural pressure was placed on sportsmen in a number of countries. Later money began playing a larger role in sport and healthy rivalry gave way to drug-taking and backroom politics. For that reason it is immensely important to remember, through the story of Emil Zátopek, an era not-so-long gone. STRANA / 7 zatopek_EN.indd 7 2/12/14 2:29:03 PM DIRECTOR’S TREATMENT pictures. That is exactly what I plan with Zátopek. I want to convey to the viewer the extraordinary experience of racing and to try to delve into the soul of a longdistance runner. I will try to capture his agonies and desires, the times he wanted to give it all up and the moments of victory. My aim with the film Zátopek is to take the viewer to the 1952 Olympics where they will experience thrilling moments alongside Emil Zátopek himself. The film Zátopek will be told using classical film language. I feel that I am at the ideal age for a filmmaker, and I wish to demonstrate refinement and a flair for film; like Zátopek, I want to show what I can do and to triumph. The story of Emil Zátopek‘s life is a thrilling one. I will do all I can to ensure Zátopek is a great film. David Ondříček director We thank Technical Museum Tatra in Kopřivnice for providing the images. For me, the life story of Emil Zátopek represents a huge challenge. Zátopek is the story of an outsider, a boy with a squeaky voice who was mistaken for a girl, described by his own mother as a weakling, and essentially lacking in sporting talent. Simultaneously, it is the story of a man with an enormous will and desire to win, a dogged and indomitable athlete who became a legend. For me, Zátopek is an immensely interesting and colourful character. A loner and a thoughtful runner who at the same time was a good-humoured chatterbox with dreams of admiration. An athlete with a huge desire to defeat his rivals and then affectionately present them with a gold medal. The film Zátopek will be a linear biographical drama in which the viewer will see Emil Zátopek’s greatest successes and setbacks in a new context. I like visual films, and try to narrate a story through STRANA / 8 zatopek_EN.indd 8 2/12/14 2:29:03 PM zatopek_EN.indd 9 2/12/14 2:29:03 PM FILMMAKERS Director, producer David Ondříček (1969), the son of famous cinematographer Miroslav Ondříček, is one of the most distinctive Czech directors of the post-Communist period. He made his début with Whisper (1996), following that picture up with Loners (2000), which was produced by his own company, Lucky Man Films. Subsequently he shot One Hand Can’t Clap (2003) and Grandhotel (2006), which premièred at the Berlin Film Festival. His most recent picture, In the Shadow, picked up prizes in all of the main categories at the Czech Film Critics Awards and a Czech Lion prize, and was the Czech Republic’s nomination for Best Foreign Language Film in the Academy Awards. In 2013 David Ondříček appeared on Variety’s Directors 10 to Watch, a list that highlights the most interesting directors of the previous year. Producer Kryštof Mucha (1975) began working at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival after graduating from the Arts Faculty of Prague’s Charles University in 1999. Since 2004 he has been the festival’s executive director. As producer he has previously worked with David Ondříček on Grandhotel (2006) and In the Shadow (2012). Lead Role Václav Neužil (1979) is a theatre, film and television actor. He graduated from the Theatre Faculty of Brno’s Janáček Academy of Music and Performing Arts and performed at the city’s Polárka, National Theatre Brno and HaDivadlo theatres. Since 2006, he has been a member of the Dejvické divadlo theatre in Prague. He received a Thálie theatre award for his portrayal of Mugsy in the latter’s production of Dealer’s Choice. STRANA / 10 zatopek_EN.indd 10 2/12/14 2:29:04 PM CONTACTS LUCKY MAN FILMS Na Maninách 1590/29 170 00 Praha 7 I have chosen one of the most talented Czech actors, Václav Neužil, for the lead role. I have been watching him since before the idea for the film Zátopek was born and have had the opportunity to work with him both in the theatre and on the big screen. Václav will prepare for the role of an athlete for over a year under experienced trainers. He may not resemble Emil facially, but I am convinced that he is similar to him in character. Václav possesses enormous willpower and at the same time a sense of humour and subtlety. He feels that Zátopek would be his life‘s role, though at the same time I believe it will not overwhelm him. David Ondříček +420 603 414 813 production@luckymanfilms.com Kryštof Mucha +420 602 273 942 mucha@kviff.com Daria Špačková +420 603 236 072 daria@luckymanfilms.com David Ondříček, Director www.luckymanfilms.com STRANA / 11 zatopek_EN.indd 11 2/12/14 2:29:04 PM zatopek_EN.indd 12 2/12/14 2:29:04 PM