While it's not exactly humming with narrative tension, Menzel's light touch and self-deprecating tone make for an engaging ride illuminated by some very sharp moments of truth.
I Served the King of England (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:80
Fresh:64
Rotten:16
Average Rating:7.2/10
Consensus: With charm and an eye for life's bittersweet moments, Czech New Wave master Jiri Menzel paints a picaresque story with whimsy and intellect.
Runtime: 2 hrs
Genre: Foreign Films
US Box Office: $345,126
Synopsis: Czech director Jiri Menzel has worked only sporadically since making a splash in the 1960s with lauded features such as CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS. I SERVED THE KING OF ENGLAND is another welcome... Czech director Jiri Menzel has worked only sporadically since making a splash in the 1960s with lauded features such as CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS. I SERVED THE KING OF ENGLAND is another welcome invitation to witness Menzel's singular vision, which is liberally sprinkled with homage to silent features, vaudeville, and slapstick. The film tells the story of Jan Dite, an ordinary Czech citizen who reflects on life after being released from jail. Much of the film is told in flashback, with Menzel transporting his audience back to Dite's younger days in Prague, both before and during World War II, where the young restaurant worker does whatever it takes to fulfill his dreams of becoming a millionaire. His reckless and frequently hilarious path to achieving his goal becomes the backbone of the movie, and Menzel deftly edits back and forth between the older and younger versions of Dite as his history is revealed. The younger version of Dite is played to excellent effect by Ivan Barnev, who manages to make the character extremely compelling. Barnev and Menzel even conspire to find humor in Dite's darkest hours, such as his marriage to a Nazi (played by Julia Jentsch) and his job in a Czech "breeding center" set up to produce Hitler youth. Food and sex become important parts of the storyline as Dite demonstrates his passion for both, and the rampant urges of his younger self are neatly tempered by Menzel's flash-forwards to the older version of the character (played by Oldrich Kaiser). Like CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS, this feature is an adaptation of a novel by Czech writer Bohumil Hrabel, and it's another hugely entertaining and utterly peerless piece of work from an inspired director. [More]
Starring: Ivan Barnev, Oldøich Kaiser, Julia Jentsch, Marian Labuda
Starring: Ivan Barnev, Oldøich Kaiser, Julia Jentsch, Marian Labuda, Milan Lasica, Zuzana Fialová, Martin Huba, Josef Abrham
Director: Jirí Menzel
Director: Jirí Menzel
Screenwriter: Jirí Menzel
Producer: Robert Schaffer, Andrea Metcalfe
Composer: Ales Brezina
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for I Served the King of England
The film's strength %u2013 it's whimsy %u2013 is also its weakness, with Menzel often letting his guard drop and letting the novel run away with the screenplay. But it's diverting and it's unique.
A funny and charming take on the basic Horatio Alger model, deepened by the filmmakers' invocations of the history of cinema and the national character of Czechoslovakia.
This episodic, picaresque film is one delightful surprise after another, a complete joy to watch.
[It's] surrounded by and infused with the potential for meaning but feels like a lark: a bit of nothing whistling past the graveyard of 20th century European history without a thing to do but indulge itself.
Forty years after his breakthrough, Menzel has returned with I Served The King Of England, and it's like he never left.
Working from a novel and script by Bohumil Hrabal, director Jiri Menzel again achieves a seriocomic triumph, as he did with his Oscar-winning 1966 adaptation of Hrabal's Closely Watched Trains.
This splendid late-career offering emanates fairytale enchantment with touches of magic realism.
"I Served the King of England" is like an endless feast, featuring one spectacular course after another. Somehow, you never get so full that you want to push yourself away from the table.
This magical realist memoir of the small men (and women) in history is a sprawling carnivalesque treat - as tall and refreshing as a tankard of Czech beer and with the same bitter aftertaste.
The deft physical comedy is a pleasure, though the leering chauvinism becomes more embarrassing as the movie progresses.
It's a film filled with wicked satire and sex both joyful and pitiful.
Tasty enough but inoffensive even when it should offend, provoke, startle.
Writer/director Jiri Menzel's ambitious filmic adaptation of Bohumil Hrabal's picaresque novel about a diminutive Czech waiter with dreams of becoming a millionaire and of owning his own hotel, is a rich black comedy steeped in wartime experience and sexu
By the time it crosses the finish line the film has nearly stopped dead.
Combining the imaginative visuals of Jeunet and Greenaway with the quirky characterizations of Kaurismaki ... a sumptuous feast of delicious food and sexy women.
Celebrates the pleasures of life while acknowledging its tragedy and absurdity... Its attitude might be described as good-natured fatalism.
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April 27, 2008:
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