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After The Velvet Revolution

primary_youtube_id: ii5CPo8s1oI
1990
00:01:30
Czechoslovakia,
Slovakia
A first-hand look at the reality of what happened in the first three years of democracy in Czechoslovakia.
Physical formats available:
Betacam SP
Digital formats available:
Quicktime (Pro Res)
Audio & visual:
Sound, Color

The fall of communism in Czechoslovakia in 1989 unleashed great hopes and expectations among Czechs and Slovaks for starting life anew, free from totalitarian rule. The documentary provides a first-hand look at the reality of what happened in the first three years of democracy. It follows people who speak about their lives under Communism and what they dream will happen.

We then see how reality measures against their dreams as lives unfold, from the end of communism in 1989 to the partition of Czechoslovakia in 1993. In the film we meet a family in South Bohemia that reclaims its land and farm confiscated by an agricultural cooperative, an underground rock star who becomes a member of parliament, a woman who lived under the threat of arrest for her work on a banned newspaper, a Slovakian psychologist who campaigns against the partition of the nation; and a former student leader of the revolution dedicated to publishing a small literary magazine.

Director: Tom Weidlinger
Collection
Tom Weidlinger
(4)
Tom Weidlinger is a writer and filmmaker who has been writing, directing and producing documentaries for 35 years.  He began work on the manuscript and documentary, The Restless Hungarian, in late 2013. His earlier work deals with a wide range of subjects, from the emotional development of boys to humanitarian aid in the Congo. Social justice is a common theme.