Mečiar

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The Lust for Power, an HBO Europe, PubRes and Negativ documentary made by the young director Tereza Nvotova (Take it Jeasy!), is the story of Slovak ex-politician Vladimir Meciar and the impact he's had on Slovak society and her own life. The story begins in 1989 when she's a one year old and the Velvet Revolution is about to bring down the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. Following their victory, almost none of the revolutionary leaders want to occupy important government positions. They organize an open call for the position of Minister of Interior, and an unknown lawyer from a small town, Vladimir Meciar, vies for the job. He wins and proceeds to rise to the very top. While governing he becomes a benevolent dictator, ruling the country using tools of corruption, propaganda and organized crime. While events like the division of Czechoslovakia or the kidnapping of the President's son unfold, Tereza and her friends are playing children's games of politics casting Meciar in the lead role. The documentary The Lust for Power doesn't only cover one chapter in Slovak political history. It raises universal and very current questions, because Meciar-like political archetypes keep popping up all over the world. Are we ever going to find out, why we tend to put blind faith in authoritarian leaders? (HBO Europe)

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Englisch The voice over, as well as Nvotová's need to unnecessarily parade herself in front of the camera, exactly in the style of those childhood games of hers we get a taste of in the documentary, are absolutely awful, not so much in their essence, given that a portrayal of the disillusioning impact of the course of the turbulent 1990s on one free-spirited family could have been quite thought-provoking, but mostly by the way the film haphazardly utilizes them, just as padding between thematic and chronological shifts. As an informative documentary, though, Mečiar works very well, not glossing over its subject too much, not spending more time on individual aspects of his regime than necessary, and not leaving out anything crucial. Moreover, in this abbreviated form, it is fascinating to see how people fall for the same types of leaders over and over again because they need their idols, their daddies, people who will be strong for them and solve their problems for them. Just notice how much people like Mečiar, Fico, Trump, Putin, Okamura, Nixon, and Mussolini have in common in their speeches and methods. Yup, they’re all tough guys. ()