BÍLÝ RÁJ

Karel Lamač

Sog.: Karel Lamač. Scen.: Karel Lamač, Martin Frič. F.: Otto Heller. Scgf.: Bohuslav Šula. Int.: Karel Lamač (Ivan Holar), Vladimír Majer (Jakub Rezek), Anny Ondráková (Nina Mirel), Josef Rovenský (Tomáš), Saša Dobrovolná (la madre di Holar), Jan W. Speerger (poliziotto), Karel Schleichert (poliziotto), Karel Fiala (il guardiano della prigione). Prod.: Kalos. 35mm. L.: 2013 m. D.: 73’ a 24 f/s. Tinted and toned.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

There is no other way to see what a tinted and toned silent film really looks like but to see one. So come and see Bílý ráj; do not miss the unique opportunity to experience a black and white positive print, colored by tinting and by toning, and not a facsimile, a transfer, an approximation, a simulation.
It is a blissful experience, since one can simply sit there and watch the film, undisturbed by nagging doubts about how it could or should actually look and without the usual constant suffering from never ever seeing a black black nor a white white and from basically everything being somehow wrong. And it’s exciting viewing, with many exclamation marks. Oh! Shimmering snow! Ah! Blue and White! There is a plot – handsome hero accused of a crime the bad guy committed, sick mother, Cinderella heroine, pursuits and chance meetings – which doesn’t interfere too much with the pleasure of being in the presence of all this shimmering translucence. An outstanding work would have made it difficult to measure how important colour can be, while this friendly, average film with the Czech dream team Karel Lamač and Anny Ondráková and the inappropriate title White Paradise proves beyond any doubt that colours can make all the difference.

Mariann Lewinsky

According to the laboratory assistent Frantíšek Rubáš special attention was given to the colours: “Lamač brought recipes for tinting and aniline colours from Germany and in my free time I made a lot of tests to establish the precise program of toning and tinting for each sequence of Bílý ráj. The result was really beautiful. The sunny shots in the mountains were yellow, evening and night scenes were blue, the sunset was a combination of blue toning and pink eosin, the interiors illuminated by oil lamps were orange, and there were other colour effects, all of them chosen with care to give a natural impression and to help the action of the film”. Indeed, the film shows an exceptional range of colours: three different tints, blue toning and brown toning and two combinations (blue toning with yellow tinting; blue toning and pink tinting).
The source of the restoration is a unique nitrate print. Under the supervision of the Národní filmový archiv in Prague, a black and white acetate positive print made from the nitrate in 1997 using wet gate printing was carefully tinted and toned to conform to the original colours in 2016 by Jan Ledecký, with a method that did not require cutting and splicing the film.

Jeanne Pommeau

Restored in 2016 by Jan Ledecký under the supervision of Národní Filmový Archiv, from a tinted and toned 35mm nitrate print