Regie:
Ladislav SmoljakDrehbuch:
Zdeněk SvěrákKamera:
Ivan ŠlapetaMusik:
Jaroslav UhlířBesetzung:
Josef Abrhám, Libuše Šafránková, Eliška Balzerová, Zuzana Fišerová-Svátková, Zdeněk Svěrák, Dáda Patrasová, Jiří Kodet, Karel Augusta, Bedřich Prokoš (mehr)Inhalte(1)
Film follows the adventures of a twice-divorced bookseller who is addicted to womanising and struggling to find the resources to support the army of children he has fathered. A case of mistaken identity leads him to hit upon a cunning plan to boost his income: posing as a waiter in the bars and cafes of Prague, taking the customers’ cash and then making a sharp exit. As you would expect, these leads to all kinds of comic hi-jinx. (Verleiher-Text)
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Kritiken (5)
Another film by Smoljak & Svěrák and I’m thrilled again. The class reunion, the desperate attempt to overtake the bus, one great scene after another. I can watch films by these two over and over again without getting tired of them. Many of the film’s lines have become part of Czech culture. Simply amazing! ()
I’m also a bookseller, so I know what I'm talking about when I say I get it. ()
One of my favourite Czech films. Great script, performances and music, legendary one-liners and a semi-nude Dáda Patrasová on top of that. What's a full rating for if not this? ()
A legendary comedy that I probably have never seen in its entirety. Until now, that is. It's a wonderful piece of Svěrák's work boasting lines you'll know even if you've never seen the film. It's hard to fault it, because the ending fits. You don't let a man like that get away with it. The mass scene of waiters running is excellent. ()
Waiter, Scarper! is undoubtedly one of the cult classics of Czech comedy filmmaking, with the participation of the star creative duo Svěrák-Smoljak. But one think about the plot, it is actually a very bitter tragicomedy, which takes a humorous (but still self-aware) look at many human weaknesses, be it fraud, womanizing, or just simple false bragging. The film thus serves us many truly humorous and even absurd moments and enriches us with a number of lines that have become humanized over the years. ()
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