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Ivan Passer
Birthday: July 10, 1933 in Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]
Ivan Passer was one of the key authors of the "new wave" of Czech cinema, a group of young people who forged an energetic and transgressive film movement in the 1960s, breaking away from the ...Show More
[casting George Segal in Né pour vaincre (1971)] United Artists had a contract with George Se Show more
[casting George Segal in Né pour vaincre (1971)] United Artists had a contract with George Segal and they were obliged to give him three projects a year, so they gave him the script. Segal decided to do it. But I didn't want George Segal to do it! He was a very difficult actor. The writer begged me on his knees to take George Segal because otherwise the film wouldn't have been made. I accepted but he was a real prima donna. Hide
[on violence in films] I refused to do violent films. I consider it is dangerous. I have seen real v Show more
[on violence in films] I refused to do violent films. I consider it is dangerous. I have seen real violence during WW2. The violence affects some people who are not able to realize the difference between reality and fantasy. So I take myself out of 80% of the American market. I got offers all the time and I rejected them. I was teaching at Sundance and Robert [actor and Sundance founder Robert Redford] offered me a film about an American Indian that was so violent I refused it. I don't want to see these movies, how should I make them? Hide
[on L'audition (1964)] There was a small theater called Semaphore in Prague, we had an idea to make Show more
[on L'audition (1964)] There was a small theater called Semaphore in Prague, we had an idea to make a fake audition in this theater. We wrote something like a screenplay, I brought a young cinematographer to Milos [director Milos Forman]: Miroslav Ondrícek, who did later Amadeus (1984) and became one of the top cinematographers in the world. Milos bought an East German 16mm camera and we got film stock left over from a TV production. When we used it, the TV laboratory would develop it for a bottle of wine. For the little money we had, we made about 100 minutes of that film. We showed it to the studios and they said "go ahead we will give you money to finish it." We wrote another short story about a folk band, Ah, s'il n'y avait pas ces guinguettes (1964), and finished the film and to our total surprise the film played even in New York. Hide
[on La Loi et la Pagaille (1974)] I met a taxi driver who told me he was part of a vigilante group i Show more
[on La Loi et la Pagaille (1974)] I met a taxi driver who told me he was part of a vigilante group in Lower Manhattan, trying to protect the neighborhood against crime. I thought it was a great idea for a comedy. I wrote the script and I made a big mistake: it was almost like a slapstick comedy. Ernest [actor Ernest Borgnine] was one of the guys, and for some reason I killed Ernie's character in the film. It was a change of genre inside the film. The audience was laughing all the time, suddenly this guy was killed and the audience was stunned. I learned that you should never do that. Hide
[on his debut feature Éclairage intime (1965)] I met a guy who saw "Intimate Lighting" sixty Show more
[on his debut feature Éclairage intime (1965)] I met a guy who saw "Intimate Lighting" sixty times. When I make a film I like to have an emotional target, I like to imagine what state of mind the audience should leave the theatre with, and in this movie I was hoping they would like to come back because they liked the characters. We visit our relatives, our friends, we know what they are going to say, to do, but we like them. I thought that is how my movie should be, and it did happen. Hide
Ivan Passer's FILMOGRAPHY
as Actor (1)