Evald Schorm
At one time, Czech director Evald Schorm was known as "the conscience of the Czech New Wave" and was known for using film to promote notions of compassion, equality, and individualism in the face of social structure. Originally an opera singer, the Prague native studied filmmaking at the prestigious F.A.M.U. between 1957 and 1962. He went on to create documentaries with the Documentary Film Studio in Prague. Schorm also worked as a film actor. Following the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, the Communist government repressed his films. Still, Schorm remained in Czechoslovakia and directed opera, stage plays, and sometimes television shows. He returned to feature filmmaking in the late '80s, but died of heart failure in 1988.
Known For
Credits
- 2009 · Golden Sixties as Self (archive footage)
- 1987 · Landscape with Furniture as Professor
- 1987 · Landscape with Furniture as Frantisek
- 1984 · Ilda as
- 1980 · Escape Home as Hugo Jílek
- 1974 · Bastion Promenade Seventy Four as Rezsõ úr
- 1969 · The Joke as Kostka
- 1967 · Hotel for Strangers as
- 1967 · Hotel for Strangers as Curate
- 1966 · A Report on the Party and the Guests as Husband
- 1966 · An Occasion to Speak as Self