
Directing
Born February 2, 1929 in Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
Věra Chytilová (February 2, 1929 – March 12, 2014) was an avant-garde Czech film director and pioneer of Czech cinema. At the age of 28 she was accepted into the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). While attending FAMU she studied underneath renowned film director Otakar Vavra, graduating in 1962. Chytilová is best known for her once highly controversial film Sedmikrásky (Daisies) – (1966). Daisies is known for its un-sympathetic characters, lack of a continuous narrative and abrupt visual style. Chytilová states that she structured Daisies to “restrict [the spectator’s] feeling of involvement and lead him to an understanding of the underlying idea or philosophy”. The film was banned within Czechoslovakia upon its initial release in 1966 until 1967, but in 1966 the film won the Grand Prix at the Bergamo Film Festival in Italy. After Daisies the government made it very difficult for Chytilová to find work within Czechoslovakia, even though she was never officially classified as a 'blacklisted' director. After the Soviet Union invasion in 1968 it was virtually impossible for her to find work and she resorted to directing commercials under her husband’s name, Jaroslav Kučera.

CzechMate: In Search of Jiří Menzel
Self

To Make a Comedy Is No Fun
Self

Pleasant Moments

Searching for Ester
Herself

Journey: Portrait of Věra Chytilová
Herself

Expulsion from Paradise

Traps

The Inheritance or Fuckoffguysgoodday

My Pragues Understand Me

A Hoof Here, a Hoof There

The Jester and the Queen

Wolf's Hole

The Very Late Afternoon of a Faun

Calamity

Panelstory or Birth of a Community

Chytilová Versus Forman
Self

The Apple Game

Fruit of Paradise

Pravda
Self (uncredited)

Seven Days to Remember

Daisies

Pearls of the Deep

Something Different

A Bagful of Fleas

Ceiling
Model (voice)

Caterwauling
Cat (voice)

Lost Children

Konec jasnovidce

Hudba z Marsu

Severní přístav

The Emperor and the Golem
First Handmaiden