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Little Otik (Otesanek)
 
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Little Otik (Otesanek) (2000)

Starring: Veronika Zilková, Jan Hartl Director: Jan Svankmajer Rating: Unrated Format: DVD
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (27 customer reviews)

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  • This item: Little Otik (Otesanek) DVD ~ Veronika Zilková

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Editorial Reviews

From The New Yorker
The reclusive Czech animator Jan Svankmajer's latest fantastical film is based on an old folktale about an infertile couple who carve a baby out of a tree stump, only to watch in terror as it comes alive and begins to devour the neighbors. In Svankmajer's hands, the gnarly stop-motion animation of the child-with a tongue protruding from bark and razorlike twigs for hands-becomes a Giacometti-esque nightmare. Wisely, he sets his story in contemporary Prague and encourages earnest performances from his actors-a combination that creates a creepy fable about parental love and its sometime horrors. In Czech. -Bruce Diones
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker

Product Description
Surrealist master Jan Svankmajer (FAUST, ALICE) brings a famous Czech legend eerily to life in the darkly hilarious cautionary tale of LITTLE OTIK. An ordinary couple, Karel and Bozena, are unable to conceive a child. When Karel digs up a tree root and whittles something vaguely resembling a human baby, Bozena's maternal longings transform the stump into a living creature with a (literally) monstrous appetite that can't be met with baby formula. Svankmajer brilliantly mixes his wicked humor with his subversive politics and love of mythology into a stunning live-action fable for our times. This Edition also features Svankmajer's surrealist THE FLAT

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Customer Reviews

27 Reviews
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4.1 out of 5 stars (27 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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42 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mother love., March 20, 2002
'Little Otik' tells its story from two female perspectives. The first is that of a young wife who, infertile like her husband, is depressed because she is childless. Buying a rural allotment to take their minds off their plight, the husband, in a moment of apocalyptic stupidity, digs up an old root and jokingly carves it into the shape of a baby. The mother, far from laughing, transfers all her pent-up maternal feelings onto the stump, even going so far as faking a pregnancy for the neighbours, wearing specially sized cushions each month. Mrs Horakova is an adult who regresses into childhood, who replaces the intolerableness of reality with fantasy and play, make-believing motherhood just as a child plays with its dolls.

The other primary viewpoint in the film belongs to Alzbetha, whose family lives facing the Horaks in a glum Prague tenement. Her development is in the opposite direction, from child to adult. A sturdy eleven-year-old, she is becoming a sexual creature, regularly ogled by the paedophile janitor, hiding sex-education books in a volume of fairy tales, dodging the blows of a comically brutal dad who freaks out every time his little girl declaims something 'adult'. Where Mrs. Horakova tries to hide reality, Alzbetha attempts to discover knowledge - she is a detective figure reading the clues of weirdness and death being left by her neighbours. It is almost as if knowledge is too much for women to bear, though, because discovery causes her moment of regress, and she replaces Mrs. Horakova as the wood's mother, resorting to increasingly desperate tactics to feed it. Because by this atage Otik has become an enormous, insatiable child, feeding on humans to sustain itself.

Facing each other like mirror reflections, these two households offer bizarre distortions on the idea of the family unit. 'Little Otik' is filmed with an austere but grotesque realism, with a shabby, small-minded Czech milieu not so different from the dank settings of Svankmajer's Communist-era films. Huge close-ups focus in on faces expresing (usually gross) appetite, whether for food, drink, sex, reassurance, family, knowledge or love. Equal prominence is given to things, especially food, whose sticky, lumpy liquidity becomes a uteral/infant displacement in a series of provocative visual puns. There are fantasies at the beginning of the film - such as when Mr. Horak sees babies everywhere, being sold like fish at a street market, or enwombed in a watermelon - but they are clearly signalled as such, as unreal as the violently unsubtle advertising that Alzbetha's couch potato father watches, usually for products that require no human input. Svankmajer's trademark puppetry is kept to a minimum, and, except in one case, is used to express character subjectivity (the girl eyeing the bulging trousers of the paedophile; her father witnessing live nails in his soup).

That one exception is little Otik himself, who is given life by the sheer force of his mother's desire, and is sustained by the collusion of the little girl. He is created by the father, and the film adds Frankenstein/Golem/Genesis resonances to its Kafka and fairy tale structure - but it is lifeless until the mother succours it. It is the two women who make it real, who displace drab and unjust reality with an all-consuming, murderous fantasy (it is significant that 'truth' is uncovered by reference to a folk tale). Fertility distorted devours all that surrounds it. The void of denial is filled by a monster who, through appetite, literally creates absence (appropriately, his victims represent authority, bureaucratic, generational and filial). I'm sure this is an allegory of some sort for modern Czech consumerism - as in Haneke's 'The Seventh Continent', a family unit is driven to ruthless besiege isself - but the relentless allusions to the director's previous film, the dark fairy tale mirror-worlds of 'Alice' and 'Down In The Cellar' expecially, suggest that the director is once more interested in burrowing the unexplored recesses of the mind, body and imagination. The result is his most uncomfortable and funny film in years.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Original, witty and horrific, November 26, 2003
"Once upon a time there lived a woodcutter and his wife who longed for a little baby..." That's how so many fairytales start and in this extraordinary, disturbing and witty film the fairytale is brought to life not in some suitably fairy-tale setting (as was the case in e.g. Cocteau's "La Belle et La Bete" or Jordan's "Company of Wolves") but in a dingy block of urban flats in central Europe. Here we find the childless, no longer so young, Bozena and Karel who are both hopelessly infertile and wholly in despair. But Karel digs up an old tree stump which looks a bit like a baby, cuts it up a bit to make the resemblance closer and gives it to his wife as a rather sick joke. Immediately, to his horror, she sets about loving it. She even sets up an elaborate fake pregnancy for herself so she can present it in public as her baby - though she soon learns that, given its appearance, she can't very easily do any such thing. Then after she has "given birth", Karel returns home to find the tree stump, named Otik, has somehow become alive and is hungrily suckling at his wife's breast. He wants to cut it to pieces with an axe but she desperately prevents him and they continue to feed it. It grows rapidly bigger and bigger and hungrier and hungrier. In a wonderfully horrible scene it attacks Bozena by grabbing her hair in its teeth. Then it eats their cat. Then it eats the postman. A social worker is sent round and asks to see the baby. "Don't be afraid, I'm not going to eat him", she says. Indeed, au contraire...

The dramatic centre of the film is not any of the characters so far mentioned so much as it is Alzbetka, the little girl next door, beautifully played by Kristina Adamcova. She has a precociously strong interest in everything to do with reproduction and motherhood and assiduously reads books on sex and obstetrics hidden inside the covers of fairy tale collections to evade the notice of her stuffy and anxious father. No one is quite as interested as Alzbetka in the parental lives of Karel and Bozena and soon she is the only person really alive to what is happening next door. But rather than being afraid of the monster she now has for a neighbour her attitude to it becomes maternal and protective...

If you like monster movies and fancy checking out something a bit different this is a good place to come. Indeed it is so enormously different that it is worth checking out if you ordinarily hate monster movies but are open to anything remarkable and imaginative. It's an excellent movie, though perhaps a little bit too long for so simple a tale and the end is a little slow coming. But the first half in particular, charting the surreal nightmare of Bozena's growing madness and then the horror of the suddenly living and feeding Otik is marvellous. Svankmajer doesn't have a monster-sized Hollywood special effects budget to create Otik but he does have a distinguished history as an animator and uses animation techniques to make something magnificantly creepy and horrible. Sometimes one is reminded of the hideous infant from Lynch's "Eraserhead" but really Svankmajer's Otik is like nothing else, a hideous confusion of roots and teeth. It might give you nightmares.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Horror for adults., March 17, 2002
By Philippe Ranger (Montreal, Can.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Little Otik is a made-for-TV film constructed in the way of the old, precious Czech films of 30 years ago. It sets a folktale (of which we are given the essential of the text) in the contemporary urban Czech Republic. A lot of the interest of the story is in the resultant recasting.

This only makes the film all the more faithful to the mythical force of the original tale, which is part-Little Red Riding Hood, part-Alien, but cuts much closer to the bone than either LRRH or Alien. Do take that as a warning: Little Otik is a horror story, and one that makes Alien (any installment) look like a ride in an amusement park. Otik himself is also a more horrible creation than any version of the Aliens, and achieved with 1% of the budget for special effects.

One example of the more-than-successful recasting for a modern urban context -- In the original tale the monster is male but all the *active* participants are women. When the tale is turned into a 2-hour contemporary film, this aspect becomes much enriched. The transgressing mother that is at the origin of the tale becomes one instance of urban motherhood, linked into the usual variety of real, incipient or wishful mothers. And the underlying impulsions are given full screen time, with few words or none.

Because the film has a true, deep, classical horror as its backbone, it can get down to the business of delivering it without masses of special effects, without surprise cuts, without terrifying sounds, without ominous hints. And most of all without extraneous business. This is why it is more than worth watching.

Perhaps, though, the TV destination pushed the author into somewhat too much restraint. You do want a movie not just to recount something but to show it, and we are only shown the necessary minimum. This is the opposite excess to Alien's and, though far less destructive than scary-movie tactics are in Alien, it still leaves you with the feeling of having missed something.

The folktale text we are given has the same all's-well-that-ends-well final fixup that many versions of Little Red Riding Hood have (when the hunter comes in). To the movie's credit, it chooses to end precisely at that moment, with a black screen. We can believe in the Happy End or take up the myth in full. (This is close to the Sphynx myth, and the Sphynx is eternal.) In either case, up to that point, we have been plunged in the mind-world of eternal horror tales. ...

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars If, if, if...
If this work is an allegoric story, one could figure out it illustrates a slogan "Kids are flowers on parents' graves" as a wood-made boy growing up into a monster eating... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Michael Kerjman

4.0 out of 5 stars Good but a Little Disturbing
This is a good fairy tale, but I am waiting until my kids, four and six, are a lot older to allow them to watch it. Read more
Published 19 months ago by J. Walsh

5.0 out of 5 stars Svankmajer at the height of his powers.
Little Otik (Jan Svankmajer, 2000)

Jan Svankmajer's Alice, perhaps his best-known movie, is the kind of thing you either love or hate. Read more
Published on May 11, 2007 by Robert P. Beveridge

4.0 out of 5 stars Fairy Tale for Adults:

The film is based on Czech fairy tale "Otesánek" ("Greedy Guts"). It is a story of a loving but childless couple, Karel and Bozena whose biggest dream is to have a baby. Read more
Published on April 16, 2007 by Galina

5.0 out of 5 stars allegory
The only thing I might add to all the previous reviews is that it isn't about the tree 'baby'? It describes how pursuit, addicton, obsession can destroy those around one.
Published on March 18, 2007 by B. Pawlick

4.0 out of 5 stars Unique film
It's based on a Czech fairy tale called "Greedy Guts". A woman badly wants a baby but both she and her husband are sterile. Read more
Published on August 5, 2006 by Wendy Schroeder

5.0 out of 5 stars Dry wood of impotence
"Little Otik" is chiefly a film about uncontrolled appetite masked by a Czech fairy tale. Svankmajer does a great job of concealing his real intention--that of unsettling the... Read more
Published on July 31, 2006 by J from NY

1.0 out of 5 stars I'd Give It Zero Stars If I Could
This "movie" was the worst thing I've seen in ages! It was stupid, gory, and long. I couldn't force myself to make it to the end, but what I did sit through was terrible! Read more
Published on June 28, 2006 by Gayle L. Edmond

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and strange
I'm making this short and sweet. I wanted to stop watching this movie all through it but just couldn't make myself watch for wanting to know what was going to happen next... Read more
Published on June 19, 2006 by Karen A. Frazier

5.0 out of 5 stars Baby feeding frenzy
This is a film about babies and food. It depicts graphic images of food in a rather unappetizing manner but conveys hard truths about food in an unpleasant context. Read more
Published on October 12, 2005 by Sarakani

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