The Shop on Main Street (1965) Poster

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9/10
Heartbreaking and Shattering
evanston_dad29 April 2005
Warning: Spoilers
"The Shop on Main Street" tells the story of Tony Brtko (Jozef Kroner), assigned as the Aryan supervisor of a small shop run by Rozalie Lautman (Ida Kaminska), a doddering old lady whose mind is mostly gone and lives in a fog, seemingly unaware that World War II is raging around her. Tony, no sympathizer to the Nazi cause, takes on the duties begrudgingly, but becomes increasingly more involved as he realizes what fate will gradually meet Rozalie. Things reach a shattering conclusion at the climax, as Tony is met by her frustrating oblivion to the danger she is in. Ida Kaminska has received most of the attention in regards to this film. Hollywood even recognized her with a Best Actress Academy Award nomination in 1966. But the standout for me was Jozef Kroner, playing a quiet, mostly lazy man who is forced against his will into the role of hero. Watching his performance is like watching a raw nerve. I had some slight problems with the director's obsession on comparing Tony to Christ (he's a carpenter, he repeatedly is shown having his feet bathed), but this is a minor complaint about a film that packs a tremendous emotional wallop. I defy anyone to forget the last painful, lingering image of the film (I won't give it away), that simultaneously comments on the world that is and laments the world that could be.

Grade: A.
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8/10
Tragic-Comic and Heartbreaking
claudio_carvalho4 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
In 1942, in a small town in Czechoslovakia, the poor carpenter Tony Brtko (Jozef Króner) is assigned "Aryanizator" of a small shop on the main street by his fascist brother-in-law Mark Kolkotsky (Frantisek Zvarík). His greedy wife Evelyn (Hana Slivková) is seduced with the promise of fortune, but Tony finds that the store owned by the deaf and senile seventy year-old widow Rozalie Lautmann (Ida Kaminska) is bankrupted and the old lady is financially supported by the Jewish community that promises a salary to him to help her. Tony befriends Ms, Lautmann and helps her in the store and repairs her furniture, and lures his wife with his salary. When the Jews are expelled from the town by the fascist, Tony decides to help the old lady.

"Obchod na Korze" is one of those movies that make you laugh and cry. The tragic-comic and heartbreaking story of a flawed Aryan man and a senile Jewish widow is very well developed and the viewer is able to understand the despair of the lead character absolutely powerless against the powers that be, in a village where everybody knows each other. His state of mind in the end with the whole situation associated to the booze drives him to his ultimate decision. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "A Pequena Loja da Rua Principal" ("The Little Shop of the Main Street")
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9/10
admire the camera shots...and the editing
erostratus-amazon28 April 2006
I'll skip over the story and the themes. Other commenters have said wonderful things about that.

Let's talk visuals.

I just have to say I was blown away by almost every single shot of the movie. The black and white color looks gorgeous, and the indoor shots have lots of shadows and texture. The outdoor shots seem overexposed, brilliant, artificial and almost unbearable. The criterion version just looks superlative.

Watch the dinner scene at the start where the man's brother in law is getting drunk with Tony. They are yelling, and having a time, and the camera dives/sweeps/rapidly turns around and falls. It conveys the dizzying nature of the conversation. The outdoor scenes in the first half of the movie have lots of bustle and activity, with lots of turns and shifts of perspective. People will remember the historical themes, but please don't overlook the amazing cinematography (which rightfully doesn't call attention to itself but enhances the emotional impact of every scene). In one scene (where Person X hits Person Y), camera conveys the claustrophobic, almost paranoiac perspective of Person X and sets the rest of the action up. We just knew what was going to happen next here.

The dream sequences/surreal effects were modest and didn't seem too fantastic; they were small enough for a small man overtaken with fear.
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10/10
A masterly wrought film that is potent, profound, and forever relevant
hh-103 March 2006
This is one of the most elegantly crafted and powerful movies relating to the Holocaust that I have ever seen.

As the editor and publisher of the memoir of a Jewish Holocaust survivor from Slovakia, I can aver that this movie is achingly true to life. The film's setting could be this woman's hometown. Like Mrs. Lautmann in the movie, this woman had lived behind one of the family's shops on her hometown's Main Street and her family's properties were seized during the Aryanization depicted in this movie.

How the writer, director, and actors of this seemingly small film were able to condense and convey so much of the socio-economic and political tenor of that time and place, with such acumen, dark humor, and pathos is astounding.

It seamlessly moves toward an inexorable conclusion, with each successive scene leading the viewer deeper into the world of the two protagonists and reeling from the truths that the filmmakers expertly offer up.

It is days after viewing it, and still, I cannot shake this movie.
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10/10
one of the most powerful films ever made
Buddy-512 July 1999
The last half hour of this film may well be the most emotionally intense examination of a personal moral crisis ever put on film.

The movie achieves that rarest feat of being able to portray one of the most horrendous experiences in human history without resorting to sensationalism or sentimentality.

The acting of Josef Kroner and Ida Kaminska is without peer and the musical score is quite simply haunting and adds immeasureably to the film's overall effectiveness.

Make every effort to see this true cinematic masterpiece.
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This is a must see for those who love the very best.
micaofboca16 November 2004
One of the finest movies ever made. Ignore revues if they don't praise this film for it's sophistication and emotional power. No other movie portraying the pogroms that initiated the holocaust come close to the depth and cinematic verite that Shop on Main Street depicts. I first saw this movie in the 1960's and it has remained in my psyche ever since in a haunting unnerving memory. Every subsequent viewing I gave it reinforced it's depth and artistic strength. The directing is on a par with Ingmar Bergman, but more direct and devoid of artistic devices. The cinematography is breathtaking (Black and White). Note the scene when the protagonist's confusion is exaggerated by the camera circling around and around, enveloping the viewer in his emotional madness and guilt. This is a must see for anyone seriously interested in the very best movies of all time.
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10/10
One of the best Holocaust films ever
carl-ralston12 August 2004
I gave this one a 10 because it is one of the most moving and engaging films about the Holocaust I have ever seen. The film is masterful in its depiction of the duplicitous nature of average citizens in Central Europe during the rise of Nazism. During World War II, the region was pulled between fascism and communism. This film is very revealing in its ability to show the true nature of totalitarianism and how it can effect the common person. The acting is brilliant, especially in the case of the old lady who is the owner of the shop. This is one of the best Czech films from the 60s, even better than Closely Watched Trains, which is also very good. This is the type of film that stays with you in that it is both haunting and thought provoking.
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10/10
Makes Schindler's List look like an average movie
therightone4 May 2005
Words can hardly do justice to this gem. Understated cinematic grandeur, ultimate moral subtlety, acting without pair in the annals of movie history, philosophical and ethical depth without sententiousness . . . should I invent new superlatives to describe this indescribably touching movie?

Yes, the movie has to do with the tragedy of Jewish people in the poisoned and poisonous Europe of the WWII period, but the emotional implications go much farther than that. They address human condition in general. It is one of those egregiously few movies which make a "philosopher" out of each of us. . . even if for a minute only. . . even if we only philosophize with our unstoppable tears. I am not one to weep easily at movies, but I defy you to watch this fabulous work of cinema without being touched to the deepest fiber of your soul.

Yes, it is that good. One of the very few movies which are better than GREAT MUSIC. Watch it - preferably on the Criterion DVD, the VHS edition leaves a lot to be desired. Unless you are an unfeeling freak, no offense intended, it is very unlikely that you will ever regret it.
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10/10
The Ideology of Terror
returning22 July 2004
Objective aethetics can sometimes require background information in order to properly judge a piece of art. In the case of this film, it is essential to realize that the film was made under heavy communist censorship. Thus we have plenty of anti-fascist rhetoric as well as the heroic rebel character who abound in Marxist cinema. Yet behind this facade is a devastating critique of the ideology of terror which is the foundation of not only fascism, but the communism of 1960's Eastern Europe.

There's a whole tradition of political film forced to obscure themes enough to slide them past superficial censors and into the minds of a sometimes discerning audience. It can be done by simply universalizing the themes and parallelling the setting with something the audience could recognize. But Chaplin had explored a different method with The Great Dictator, by finding the similarities between two seemingly opposite figures. Through his critique of Hitler, he took on American pomposity and brutality. It is a particularly effective method as it allows the target no way out, turning its own accusations against itself.

Much has been said about the comedy and tragedy's coexistence in this film, and it is indeed an important facet. The simple reason being that life is both funny and tragic, thus to universalize the themes so that any person can be in the Brtko's place, it is imperative to represent both spheres of life.

But the theme is not limited to a broad contemplation on life in the universal sense. There is a much more devestating critique of all totalitarian ideologies. Brtko begins with a simple and, one could argue, natural sense of survival. He is pushed into greed by his wife, and is then pushed into desperation by the his state-sanctioned duty. He finally arrives into a complete state of terror caused by the irrationality of the events around him, and heightened by his relationship with Mrs. Lautmann. Of course, this kind of degradation could happen just as easily under a communist regime as in the days of the Nazis, and this was what the censors missed and the Academy Awards loved.

Few films have the social significance of this one. Not only for its powerful message, but the fact that it is a glimpse into a world we know little about.

5 out of 5 - Essential
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10/10
Film brilliantly combines comedy and tragedy in tale of moralresponsibility.
grimalkintoo23 March 2001
This movie is one of my all-time favorites. It depicts a lazy, self-interested "everyman" caught up in a personal struggle of good and evil. The directors/writers question the moral responsibility of genocide, as smalltown Czechs under Nazi domination respond to their Jewish neighbors. Jews are no longer allowed to own shops, so their businesses' control and ultimate ownership is turned over to Christians -- namely, Nazi sympathizers. One such Christian, brother-in-law of a high-ranking official, is given a button shop, owned by a deaf, elderly Jewish woman, who is not even aware that there is a war going on. Due to her deafness, she has the innocence of a child. The Christian overseer finds that the shop makes no money whatsover, but also learns that the Jewish community supports the old woman and will pay him a salary to watch over her. What develops is a platonic love story between the two, hilariously funny due to the old woman's inability to comprehend the impending doom around her, and her assistant's struggle to shield her from harm while concerned with self-preservation. The movie works on numerous levels -- as a love story, including dreamlike fantasy elements of a bygone world where Nazi horrors don't exist; and as a tale of ultimate moral responsibility. It is a story of basically good people, who say nothing, see nothing, hear nothing, and do nothing when genocide threatens their neighbors, and who thus enable genocide to occur. The brilliant combination of hysterically funny scenes set against a background of impending mass murder brings this film to a life that is lacking in most humorless holocaust-oriented films. The laughter through tears produces an ultimate impact that is emotionally devastating. This film justly received an Oscar for Best Foreign Film when it was released. It was produced during a brief high point of the Czech film industry, prior to Russia's reconquering of the country and squelching any artistic freedom. All the performers are exceptional, particularly the two leads. (After the Russian takeover, actress Ida Kaminski emigrated to New York and attempted to revive the Yiddish Theatre.)
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7/10
The Offbeat Czechs and the Holocaust
gavin694216 February 2016
In 1942, in a small town in Czechoslovakia, the poor carpenter Tony Brtko is assigned "Aryanizator" of a small shop on the main street by his fascist brother-in-law Mark Kolkotsky. His greedy wife Evelyn is seduced with the promise of fortune, but Tony finds that the store owned by the deaf and senile seventy eight year-old widow Rozalie Lautmann is bankrupted and the old lady is financially supported by the Jewish community that promises a salary to him to help her.

I have come to feel that the Czech film of the 1960s may be one of the best places and best decades in the history of film. The "new wave" there is far more interesting than anything that came out of France or Italy, and was a decade ahead of the United States.

This film manages to be a serious examination of an ethical conflict but still has a hint of humor and gaiety. Not enough to be offensive or dismissive of the subject matter, but just enough to remind us of the glorious Czech new wave.
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10/10
The Inconceivability of the Horror
two-rivers13 March 2000
Warning: Spoilers
The little shop on the main street of a small Slovakian town belongs to Mrs Lautmanova, a Jewish lady that deals with notions. It's the time of the Nazi-occupation, and the property of all Jews is confiscated and are to be administered by Arians. Brtko is one of them. He has achieved nothing in life, is slow in mind and a henpecked husband. Now he "inherits" the shop, thanks to his wife and his brother-in-law, a converted Nazi. The way to sudden wealth seems to have smoothed, a circumstance that calls for a glittering and unrestrained carousal.

On the next day, however, some difficulties arise: Mrs Lautmanova isn't to be lured away that easily from her shop; she is by no means conscious of the current political situation. In the end Brtko can consider himself lucky that he is at least admitted as a shop assistant, on recommendation of other members of the Jewish community. That way he can give the impression to the town officials as if he fulfilled his obligations.

It is now that Brtko's consciousness gradually begins to dawn. Little by little he understands that there is a profound contempt for mankind in the Nazi proceedings. The day when all Jews are convoked on the Town Square, he at least gets a hunch of what will be their real destination: the allegedly well-meant resettlement will lead them to a sure death in one of the concentration camps.

Brtko does everything within his power to save Mrs Lautmanova from the fate that awaits her. She won't listen to his message though, however hard he may try to convey it to her. In sheer desperation he gets drunk, while still attempting to arrange the woman's escape. But his actions are so clumsy, that he frightens the life out of the old lady. Intending to get away from him, she stumbles and falls so badly that she is killed.

Just before Brtko pays tribute to the futility of his efforts and hangs himself, he has a strange vision: He sees himself and Mrs Lautmanova as bridegroom and bride, walking hand in hand along Main Street.

Two most extraordinary characters are presented by Jan Kadar in order to make the interaction of culprits and victims under the Nazi rule understandable. But do we really understand? Wouldn't we rather react in the same way as Old Mrs Lautmanova does, who is completely unable to perceive the danger that menaces her and her people? Maybe it is because we simply refuse to believe it, even today, when the genocide committed by the Nazis is a historical fact, and we ought to know that human beings are capable of committing such atrocities.

We would be better off, if there actually was an effective way to combat inhumanity. But the failure of Brtko's rebellion is also our own defeat. It stands for the helplessness of the average man in the face of politically organized crimes whose motivations we are unable to conceive.
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7/10
Righteous Gentile's martyrdom may not ring true but chronicle of collaborators' complicity in the Holocaust hits the mark
Turfseer24 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
'The Shop on Main Street' was co-directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. Klos was a Czeck and Kadár, a Slovak born in Hungary. The setting of the film is a small town in Slovakia during the early part of World War II. Slovakia (which became The First Slovak Republic) was the only country along with Germany and the Soviet Union to invade Poland when the war started. Slovakia was forced to declare independence by Germany and a puppet regime was set up with Jozef Tiso as president and Vojtech Tuka, Prime Minister. Tuka was far more radical than Tiso and headed the pro-Nazi wing of the Slovak People's Party. The wing was supported by the Hlinka Guard, who sported the double cross symbol on their uniforms. In the film, a giant tower featuring the double cross is built in the center of town. The deportation of the Jews (a key element of the plot) was facilitated by Tuka. Approximately 57,000 Jews were deported up until 1942, when various factions in Slovakia got wind that the Jews were not being deported to labor camps, but rather were being exterminated. The deportations stopped for about two years when Slovakia insisted that further deportations would affect their economy in a deleterious way. In 1944, a national insurrection against the Nazis (the Slovak National Uprising) led to a Nazi take-over of the country. Deportations of Jews began again and even as late as March 1945, large numbers of Jews were murdered.

'The Shop on Main Street' primarily addresses the issue of the ordinary man's response to living in a society under the yoke of fascist oppression. Our protagonist is Tóno Brtko, an often unemployed carpenter who lives in a modest home with his henpecking wife, Evelyna. Tóno's brother-in-law, Markuš Kolkotský,is commander of the Fascist guards. In an excellent scene where we really get to meet the characters for the first time, Kolkotský and his wife pay his in-laws a visit at their house and they all get drunk. Tóno is angry at his brother-in-law for not doing more for him given his position as the town commander. Kolkotský surprises Tóno when he hands him a document, appointing him 'Aryan' manager of a Jewish button store (hence the shop on Main Street). You'll note that at this point, Tóno has no guilt feelings about making a deal with the devil, accepting the confiscation of the store (and his position as manager), as a fait accompli.

When he arrives at the store, he finds it owned and operated by an elderly Jewish widow, Mrs. Lautmannová , who's hard of hearing and slightly senile. Kuchár, an accountant and righteous Gentile resistance fighter, reveals that Lautmannová primarily relies on donations from the Jewish community and most of the stock in the store is depleted. Nonetheless, Tóno agrees to an arrangement that if he acts as the 'Aryan manager', the Jewish community will pay him to look after Mrs. Lautmannová and make sure no harm comes to her.

Gradually, Tóno takes a liking to Mrs. Lautmannová and when he learns that the Jewish community is about to be deported, he becomes a righteous Gentile and is determined to save her. Tóno becomes so militant for the just cause of sticking up for the Jews, that he ends up beating his bigoted wife, who is convinced that Mrs. Lautmannová is hoarding money. Unlike the famed Oskar Schindler and the Polish sewer worker, Socha, in the film 'In Darkness', Tóno is in a position where he can only attempt to save one Jew. Unfortunately, it soon becomes apparent to both Tóno (and the audience) that he has no chance of success in saving the elderly woman, especially after Kuchár is arrested for helping the Jewish community and dragged through the streets with a sign posted on his chest, 'Friend of the Jews', soon to meet a horrible, excruciating death.

Directors Kadár and Klos are on solid ground by not glossing over the fact that a certain segment of Slovakian society was wickedly anti-semitic and actively collaborated with the Nazis in the deportation of the Jews. In fact, in 'The Shop on Main Street', you never see any Germans--the deportations are carried out by local Nazi supporters. Even those 'ordinary' people such as Tóno's wife, are not immune from basic prejudices as evidenced by her diatribe against Mrs. Lautmannová. Before his epiphany, Tóno is also unashamed, taking money from the Jewish community while participating in the illegal confiscation of Mrs. Lautmannová's shop.

Despite Kadár and Klos' admirable chronicling of the dark side of a segment of the Slovakian people, they are still determined (as other filmmakers who come from countries who collaborated with the Nazis) to show that there were still good people amongst the bad apples. Kuchár is one of the good ones and Tóno becomes one. Unlike Schindler, Tóno is trapped and is forced to make a 'Sophie's Choice-like' decision. Shall he push Mrs. Lautmannová out the door into the waiting hands of the Fascist Guards? Or into a closet in order to hide her? SUPER SPOILERS AHEAD. Unfortunately, the 'push' is an ambivalent one--he's angry with her because her cause is hopeless and she should at least realize it but somehow he also is trying to think of a way he can save her. He ends up pushing her too hard into the closet and the ensuing fall causes her death.

Are Kadár and Klos trying to assuage their own guilt by turning Tóno into a martyr? The message here is that not all Slovakians were bad during that time. But I think it would have been more realistic if Tóno lived with his guilt over Mrs. Lautmannová's death. His ambivalent actions, where at one point he's thinking about saving his own skin, were normal. By having him commit suicide, Tóno adopts a Christ-like mantle, unrepresentative of the average Slovakian's response to the harrowing reality of the times they were living in.
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1/10
A drunken fool has no idea how to deal with the realities of Naziism and the beginning of the "Final Solution".
millardto22 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
A bunch of stupid drunk people become involved w/ a senile old Jewish woman and an intelligent, humanitarian Aryan and deal w/ one of the most important moments in 20th century history. Sure, it probably happened, but there is no need to watch such a pathetic display of human impotency and utter despair. A failing Czech carpenter becomes the Aryan supervisor of an old Jewish woman's button store when his brother-in-law throws him a seemingly potential goldmine due to his place in Hitler's military. Then we find out, there are no buttons (or stock of anything she is selling) so, OH NO, it's NOT a goldmine. But then "shopping day" comes and the store is packed w/ patrons and things to sell them. What the?!!!... This story has no real consistency except for it's sad and irritating telling of an important story. The only light in this disturbing tale is the Aryan helping the Jews. He's the only character that seems to have ANY clue. So, in conclusion, if you want to watch a frustrating dive into human incompetence and idiocy w/ no sense of continuity, check this out.
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Powerful testimony about Europe's involvement in the Nazi Era.
mdm-118 October 2004
This film is one of the most gripping stories told about Nazi occupied Europe. A small town in 1942 Czechoslovakia feels the changing regime envelop the people, pinning friends against one another, and turning even the most pacifistic men into traitors. Small-time carpenter Tony is married to an attractive, but constantly nagging and complaining, materialistic woman. Seeing her in-laws successful, while exploiting the political advantages of working with the Nazis, makes Tony's wife ever more determined to have a "piece of the fortune" the Jews are said to have been hording. Although refusing to work at a "tower of Babel" the Nazis are erecting as a symbol of their glory (and doing without the money he could have earned), Tony doesn't speak out against the "new order" either.

When Tony finds himself as assistant to an old lady at her failing notions shop (which he "legally" was entitled to take over), he learns about the Jewish community, how everyone looked out for one another, and how these people were no different from other folk in town, if anything they were more human than the rest. Still afraid of retribution from the Nazis and their sympathisers, Tony is in a no-win-situation.

The final scene of this 1966 Best Foreign Film Oscar Winner was likely an inspiration for the final scene in the 1997 Blockbuster "Titanic". This cinematic gem serves as a reminder to the old German saying "Leben und leben lassen" (live and let live). A classic indeed!
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9/10
How Easy It Is
carol-16022 April 2005
A fine movie showing just how easy it is for people to become oppressors. Tono is just an average Joe, keeping his nose clean, until he is co-opted into participating in the Nazi regime by his well-placed brother-in-law. Along the way Tono's wife shows the warping power of greed. The seeds of a fatal moral dilemma are set as Tono becomes the Aryan "controller" of a Jewish business run by a befuddled widow. Ultimately the horror becomes clear as the Jews are rounded up and the widow - played brilliantly - briefly comes to her senses and realizes she is the victim of a "pogrom." All the relationships and characters in the movie are finely drawn and well acted, and the production values were excellent.

The version I reviewed was subtitled in English, and unfortunately some of the subtitles were difficult to read.
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10/10
One of the best films ever concerning the Holocaust
DennisJOBrien27 May 2005
I was lucky to see this movie in a cinema in America in 1966, when I was only 14 and beginning to learn about the terrible events of World War II and the Holocaust. I had gone to see it with my younger sister and we were both amazed at how touching a movie could be when you read the words in English. Many years later I bought a VHS copy of it at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. The picture holds up remarkably well and seeing it through mature eyes I can now understand what a masterpiece of the cinema it is. The direction and photography perfectly capture the subdued horror of the inevitable tragedy facing this small Slovak town. It is simply heartbreaking, yet has many warm and funny moments as well. Ida Kaminska should have won her Oscar in this film, as she beautifully portrayed all the old Jewish women whose property and lives were taken by the Nazis and their cohorts. I regret that Jozef Kroner did not receive an Academy Award nomination for his fine performance. The director, Jan Kadar, did an excellent job that also deserved an Oscar and I remember being saddened when I learned of his death. He left the world a gem to be treasured forever.
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10/10
so real
tobu15 December 2004
This movie is deeply emotional and moving. Depicting a moral fight of Tono, an average citizen. Tono finds himself in an internal struggle between the moral right and evil. The last hour of the movie is full of pain, hatred, terror and psychological suffering of the Slovak citizen during the times of Jewish deportation. It's so real that it makes you live through the struggle Tono faces. Should he save the old Jewish lady or not? It's surely one of the best, if not the best, Slovak movies ever made. P.S. To all those thinking this is a Czech movie, it's not. It's more Slovak than you'd think. Of course at the time it was CzechoSlovak cinematography. But actors in this movie are Slovak and the language is Slovak. :)
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10/10
One of the Best I have seen
sumanta626 August 2006
I have a collection of over 2000 foreign films, but this film one of the best films I possess and holds a special place in my heart. Not only is it memorable for the story or for it's symbolisms but also for some of the best acting in world cinema you will ever see.

Set in 1942 Czechoslovakia, Tono (Jozef Kroner) is appointed the "Aryan Controller" of a Jewish owned business that has been seized from an elderly Jewish woman, Rozalie Lautmann (Ida Kaminska). Because of her senility, the woman is oblivious to events taking place around her. She believes Tono to be her newly appointed "assistant". Conflict and tension for Tono appears from several different sources, from his venal wife, from his corrupt brother-in-law, from his growing affection and respect for the widow Lautmann, from the larger, external forces that threaten to overwhelm his newly arrived arrangement that, for the first time, offers him money, status, and respect. Tono is forced to decide between two equally unpalatable choices : To be a Jew loving Aryan or send Mrs. Lautmann to the concentration camp. That dilemma is played out primarily as an alcohol monologue, as Tono gradually breaks down under the stress of a decision he doesn't want to make.

The frailties of human psyche and dilemma of being selfless or selfish has been beautifully explored in this film. The director tells this multi-layered story with the help of two wonderful actors. This kind of performance by the two central protagonists are rarely seen in world cinema. The drunken Tono and bumbling Rozalie will be etched in my memory forever. Don't miss this gem.
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10/10
Absolutely breathtaking
ludvo30 December 2014
And by breathtaking I mean literally breathtaking - while watching this movie, from time to time, especially during the last 30 or so minutes, you will realize that you are not breathing. I don't know what else to say, everything has already been said in other reviews.

Naturally, I've heard about this movie before, I knew that it was the only Slovak movie to ever win an Oscar, I've read the reviews, but I was a bit hesitant to watch it because I know how badly many of the great old movies age and I didn't want to be disappointed.

Well, I wasn't. This movie didn't age well, this movie simply doesn't age at all. The reason for this is that it deals with an eternal internal conflict in all humans - a conflict between what is good for me and what is moral. And what is "good" anyway? What is "moral"? What is the right thing to do? Is it always right to do the right thing? Is it always wrong to do the wrong thing? Where is the balance? Is there a balance? The main protagonist keeps asking these questions until it is too late. And most of all, he forces you to keep asking these questions yourself. You will keep asking yourself these questions long after watching this movie. And the only answer you will be able to come up with is "I don't know! I don't want to answer!" Just like Tono Brtko didn't want to answer them.

It is a story of an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances. A story of an ordinary man being forced to make a decision that no one wants to make. A decision that makes you choose between two wrong outcomes.

The acting is simply perfect, there is no other word to describe it. Kaminska is perfect, Kroner is perfect and they are both perfect together. If there was an Oscar awarded for the best chemistry between two main protagonists, these two would definitely win it (and to this day I haven't seen any duo perform better).

The final dream sequence is the best dream sequence I have ever seen in a movie, especially if you notice all the symbolism. It shows the contrast between what is and what could be. Between what podiums and uniforms are used for and what they could be used for. And ultimately, a contrast between the good in each and every one of us and the evil in each and every one of us.

Watch this movie and you will never forget it. Trust me.
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10/10
Ida Kaminska is top of the world on this film.
ilovetoseethemovie7 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I have seen this movie at 2005 World Film's festival in Thailand on last October. I have to admit that the title of this movie was out of my interest at first. Moreover, I hadn't known anything about this movie so far.

After having finished seeing Obchod na korze, I got by far more than I bargained for. The movie itself is really touching and moving, especially masterful in its plot of depicting grass-root citizens under the influence of Nazism control. Ida Kaminska is also fantastic and superb in portraying her role as Rozalie Lautmann. She was nominated Best Actress in leading role for Oscar that year, but failed to get Oscar's nod. I quite wonder why, among other nominees. Most importantly, the last scene that Ida Kaminska holding an umbrella while her other hand holding Jozef Króner's hand, walking down together on the street is totally excellent. It is one of the best ending scenes and one of best Holocaust films I have seen in my life.

Undoubtedly, I give it 10.
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7/10
Warm, Comic, Tragic.
rmax30482328 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The film sort of naturally divides itself into three parts. In the first, we get the impression that we're about to witness a slow, slice-of-life movie about a small town in Czechoslovakia during the Nazi occupation. It's not entirely without interest but it looks like it's going to be a long slog. We meet Jozef Kroner, the central figure, a lazy carpenter with a loving but exasperated wife, and we meet his brother-in-law, an anti-Semitic fascist guard in his gestapo uniform. The brother-in-law visits Kroner's family, bringing gifts of food and rum gotten from his many connections. There follows a realistic scene in which the family gets drunk and argue, in between songs, until finally the men fall on the floor, pulling the tablecloth with them. A perfectly normal family evening.

The second introduces us to the town itself, including those members of the community who are Jewish. Kronin's brother-in-law is in the process of "Aryanizing" the town. The process involves sending a Christian into a Jewish business and having him act as manager and clip the profits. As a "favor", the brother-in-law arranges to have Kronin become the Aryan of a shop on Main Street. "You'll be a rich man!" he promises. But the favor is done out of spite. It's a tiny button shop with an apartment in the back. And it's run by a sweet, generous, but feisty old lady (Ida Kaminsky) who is impaired by age to the point at which she can't really understand what people are trying to tell her. For that matter, she can't HEAR them. "Selling buttons is not man's work," Kroner complains, and he's not very good at it. A comic scene has him trying to cope with a shop full of babbling housewives and spilling boxes of buttons all over the floor. Eventually, Kroner and Kaminsky form a bond. The friendship makes him protective and her maternal.

The third part gets entirely serious and involves the rounding up and deportation of all the Jews in the village. Here, the movie is weaker than it should be. We've grown to like Mr. Katz, the barber, and when his shop is taken over and Aryanized and he leaves, we're sad, while Katz himself is more philosophical. A Christian friend who tries to hide him is beaten and driven through the village square with a sign hung around his neck -- "Jew Lover." But when the Jews are being assembled in the square -- one by one, with that long long list of names being read through a loudspeaker -- and Kroner is torn by fear, the instinct of self-preservation, and a desire to hide Ida Kaminska, who is unaware of what's going on, the scene is naturally tragic, but it's overwrought too. It goes on too long. With Kaminska in her apartment, saying the prayers for the Sabbath, Kroner drinks a whole bottle of vodka while pacing around the shop, talking to himself, wild-eyed and manic. His final attempt to save her ends tragically for both of them.

The genocidal program of the Nazis was such a monstrous event that it's difficult to deal with a movie that describes it, without the movie itself being near perfect. The terrible fate of so many millions of innocent people of all ages has to be treated carefully or else the movie comes across as an easy tear-jerker, demeaning and cheapening the event itself.

This is a fine movie. It doesn't make an overly obvious grab for one's humanity, but that final scene seems to be drawn out and Kroner's final act hasn't been adumbrated. Still well worth seeing.
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10/10
perhaps the best film on the holocaust apart from Schindler's list
planktonrules28 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This is an exceptional movie concerning the holocaust and the Czechoslovakian peoples' reaction to Nazi rule and their laws regarding the Jews. Instead of focusing on the perspective of Jews, the film centers on a seemingly comical and insignificant man (Antonin Brtko) whose brother-in-law is a high local official for the Nazi regime. Brtko is a rather lazy and poor man with few pretensions. However, his simple life is turned upside down when this brother-in-law gives Brtko legal control over a local Jewish business. It seems that ALL Jews are to be stripped of their businesses and they will be given to Aryans. Brtko's wife is ecstatic about their new life and, at first, Brtko feels much the same. It is absolutely AMAZING how they can celebrate their new fortune when it is at the expense of others' great misery! However, when Brtko goes to this shop, he finds it is a very poor button shop run by a 78 year-old lady who is hard of hearing. Try as he can to explain that she MUST vacate the premises because he is the new owner, she is completely oblivious of her plight. In addition, she is a sweet old woman and Brtko just can't bring himself to force her out onto the street.

At times, this predicament and their relationship seemed rather comical and sweet, but as this is based on a horrific time in history, this all builds until the terrible conclusion. How this conclusion is handled and Brtko's reaction is exceptionally well handled and I don't want to say more, as it might spoil the film.

I am actually amazed this movie was made, as it is a very scathing indictment of the Czechoslovakians. It does not flinch in its portrayal of the complicity and joy felt by many during this sick time.
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7/10
THE SHOP ON MAIN STREET (Jan Kadar and Elmar Klos, 1965) ***
Bunuel19768 September 2006
This is a well-acted but somewhat overrated serio-comic human drama with a WWII backdrop; typical of Eastern European cinema at the time, the film emerges as rather slight (the grim aspects of its plot are only really felt during the last half-hour or so, making it unnecessarily long at a little over 2 hours) and is full of simple, earthy and clearly downtrodden characters - the Fascist regime standing in for the contemporary Communist oppression - who still burst into song at the drop of a hat! Even if the two main characters aren't exactly endearing (especially the rather insufferable and possibly dim-witted old Jewish lady), the ironic tragic ending packs an undeniable punch.

Even though the film was taken for a poster-bearer for the nascent Czech New Wave - indeed, it went on to win the Oscar for Best Foreign Film - it is intrinsically too old-fashioned to easily fit the bill. This was the directing team's seventh (and penultimate) collaboration, after which Kadar left for the United States to continue making films there - most notably THE ANGEL LEVINE (1970) - before his untimely death in 1979.
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Don't Wanna Go Down to the Basement
tieman648 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
With "The Shop on Main Street", director Jan Kadar takes us to 1940s Slovakia. Set in a small rural town during the deportation of Jews to Nazi concentration camps, the film revolves around Tono, a kind hearted carpenter.

Tono spends his days playing with his dog and being pestered by the husband of his wife's sister, the local Fascist leader. Like most people in his village, Tono doesn't like the Fascists, but also doesn't do much to oppose them. He's timid, and like many rural persons during the era, doesn't quite understand what's going on around him anyway.

When the Fascists begin turning Jews over to the Nazis, one Jewish shop, which sells buttons and trinkets, is left without an owner. Tono's Fascist brother-in-law thus gives the shop to Tono and appoints him "Aryan Overseer". Tono and his wife imagine that this will make them wealthy, but it turns out that the shop is still inhabited by its senile owner, an elderly Jewish lady called Mrs. Lautmann, who is poor and cannot make a living from her business.

What's funny is that the Jewish lady is as confused as Tono is. She thinks he has come to her shop to act as an assistant, whilst he has no idea how to run a shop, let alone any inkling of the genocidal horrors blossoming all around him.

Eventually Tono and Mrs Lautmann grow to be friends. He becomes a kind of duplicitous character, simultaneously working for the Fascists in their effort to remove Jews from the town, and for the Jewish community, which pays him to take care of the feeble Mrs. Lautmann. This scheming comes to an end however, when the Fascists finally order the deportation of all Jews, leaving Toto torn (ala another Holocaust movie, "Sophie's Choice" or even the dark kid's movie, "Battle for Terra") between three impulses: save Mrs Lautmann, save himself and his family, and a kind of fatalistic, feeling of absolute indifference.

In one great sequence, Tono seems to hold all these feelings simultaneously. In a drunken stupor he fluctuates wildly from one position to the next, pushing the bewildered Mrs. Lautmann out into the streets, then locking her in a cupboard, then yanking her out again, unsure whether to sell out this little Jewish lady, and his soul in the process.

The film's ultimate point, though, is that for all his heart, Tono can do nothing to derail history. History is a giant machine that rolls somewhere out beyond the grasp of men, comprehensible only in hindsight. The film ends, shockingly, with Tono's suicide and the death of Mrs Lautmann. We're then shown a nostalgic fantasy – which, in a way, satirises the end of "Schindler's List" decades before Spielberg's film was even made – in which Tono and Mrs. Lautmann, dressed in the finery of a pre-Fascist age, stroll merrily together through the streets, the hazy lighting indicating that such an ending is entirely wishful and counter-factual.

Cinematic depictions of the Holocaust are problematic for two logically opposed, yet both entirely cogent, reasons. On the one hand, the horror of the event is banalized by any effort to represent it, making it proportional to all other events. Films like Claude Lanzmann's "Shoah", Lumet's "Pawnbroker", and in a way Mamet's "Homicide" and Kubrick's "Shining", are films that direct our attention to the unrepresentability of the Holocaust as its subject matter. On the other hand, and at the same time, the Holocaust gets thrown about as a token of high seriousness and good faith, and as a weapon to silence other concerns and other discourses (think the Ricky Gervais comedy sketch where Kate Winslet effortlessly wins Oscars through Holocaust films, or Jerry Lewis' Oscar bait, "The Day The Clown Cried"). Holocaust films win Oscars precisely because the subject matter itself is used to deflect any questions about aesthetic value and artistic integrity. "Schindler's List" exhibits both of these tendencies simultaneously. At the same time that "Schindler's List" relentlessly and aggressively banalizes the Holocaust — few set pieces are as condemned, by artists, directors and writers, as Schindler's List's shower sequence — the film also claims a moral authority from its subject matter that preempts all criticism in advance.

So in a way, Kadar's film presents the anti-Schindler, shattering Spielberg's redemptive fable (Rivette: "Turning the Holocaust into a redemptive allegory is an offence without reprieve."). Tono's intentions cannot buffer the monstrous forces of Fascism and Nazism, let alone Stalinism, Maoism, American Slavery or the many other horrors of the last several hundred years. "The Shop on Main Street" reminds us — and this is a reminder that Americans need more than Europeans — that a good conscience, and a basic human decency, are not enough to save us.

This is not defeatism or the admittance of a kind of individual, self-reflexive impotency, but rather a call for organisation. One man saving 1,100 Jews whilst the pointless, industrialised murder of six million occurs elsewhere, does not prove that people are "good" and "can make a difference". It proves people are brutes and that it often takes more than a molehill to stop a mountain. Human beings do indeed "make their own history", but, as Marx went on to say, "they do not make it just as they please."

8/10 – See David Mamet's "Homicide" and Marek Najbrt's "Protector".
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