Product Details
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (Valerie a týden divu)

Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (Valerie a týden divu)
Directed by Jaromil Jires

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"Boldly in the paths of Bergman, Fellini, and Bunuel" - NY TIMES / "Strange, mad, beautiful…" - CHICAGO SUN-TIMES / recently toured U.S. arthouses / A horror story with a nest of vampires. A bewitching fairy tale about a young girl’s coming of age. VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS is a betwitching fairy tale in the tradition of ALICE IN WONDERLAND. Valerie discovers the world is not what it seems after she gets a pair of magical earrings. This haunting portrait of a beautiful girl’s emergence into womanhood is a ravishingly beautiful dream film in which horror and sexuality mix with tenderness and innocence.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #21329 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-01-13
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: Czech
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 73 minutes

Customer Reviews

Pearls before swine....it seems.5
"And here... is our clue to the method of the adventure, if one is ever to return home.
It is this: not to identify one's self with any of the figures or powers experienced."
- Joseph Campbell

One of the great films of the 20th century, and unavailable for the last 30 years. A real shame (thank you Facets for its release! And such a beautiful print). I remember seeing "Valerie" for the first time in 1974. I had no idea what was going on, But it was one of the most beautiful films I'd ever seen, so I relaxed and watched the flow of images. I've seen it many times since (thanks to a bootleg copy).

The key to its understanding is that she is asleep from the start of the film to the end, and what we are seeing are her dreams, a unique approach to say the least. A good analysis of the film can be found on pages 229-236, The Czechoslovak New Wave by Peter Hames, U. of California Press, 1985.

The end of "Valerie" is, to me, profoundly touching. During most of the film, she freely interacts with the characters of her dreams, but by the end she has achieved a kind of detached enlightenment; though they call to her, Valerie refuses to interact with them anymore. And so at the end, in that Autumnal landscape, as her dreams dance around her, she climbs into her bed one last time......Sleep tight sweet Valerie, don't let the bedbugs bite....."Fear is only a dream / so dream little one dream."

A note to Mr. Nietzsche (not the philosopher); the term is not "Claymation", that word was invented by the animator Will Vinton to promote his work. The correct term is "Stop-motion".
A note to Mr.Cox: "La Femme Nikita" is neither "odd-ball" nor a "classic".

Finally, regarding the remarkably unkind reviews of "Valerie" by the above 2 persons,
I'll let uncle Will have the last word: "You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things...."

And now the soundtrack is available on CD. will wonders never cease?

Exquisite phantasmagoria...5
For years, I'd read about this film, then I managed to track down a bootleg video copy of it in the mid-90s. Even though that video was in less than prime condition, the brilliance of the film shined through anyway.

The first time I watched VALERIE..., I really had no idea what it was about, but the haunting visuals and score--oh, what music!--entranced me. I've watched the film many times since then, including during its recent U.S. arthouse run, and, each time, I feel like I'm unlocking some puzzle. On the surface, it's all so simple, but underneath, it's something else entirely.

Then there is Valerie, one of the most charming film heroines I've ever encountered. Imagine watching a young Kate Bush in a fantasy film, and you'll understand what I mean. It's a testiment to the director's sensitivity and the acting ability of the actress who plays Valerie that this film doesn't sucumb to soft-porn cliches or mawkishness. Ravishing.

VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS has been worth waiting for.

Surreal adult fairy-tale from the czech republic5
Closely inspired in the nightmarish novel of czech poet and writer Vitezlav Nezval, which in its turn is inspired in Gothic imaginary and fairy tales, this surreal symbolic vampire fable directed with fine irony by Jaromil Jires ( " The joke ", adaptation to the big screen of Kundera's novel ) narrates the bizarre adventures of a innocent bourgeois teenage girl during the week she begins to puberty, surrounded in a succesion of sexual fantasies ruled by a vampire named Tchor from whom obscure influence gets to flee with the help of her magic earrings in an oniric journey in which Lewis Carroll and the Marquis de Sade could perfectly be her travelling partners. The movie is filmed in a subtle narrative way that reminds Fellini's films from the 60's ( for instance: " Giulietta degli spiriti ", " Fellini- Satyricon " ) where the frontier between dreams and " reality " vanishes. The way that the director chooses to conduct the film and its context allows to read the bizarre world and erotic symbolism that surrounds to the protagonist as a subjectivetion of a familiar and represive setting that suddenly becomes strange to her innocent and anxious eyes by the effect of her sexual awakening. Shot after the russian invasion to Prague the film contains also a melancholy political allegory about the unfair situation in which lived most of the czech citizens during the years of the dictatorship.