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  1. Conspirators of Pleasure

    Conspirators of Pleasure

    1997 · Comedy drama · 1h 26m

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  1. Conspirators of Pleasure ( Czech: Spiklenci slasti) is a 1996 black comedy film by Jan Švankmajer. His third feature film after Alice and Faust, it was nominated for the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival. [1] Plot.

    • Petr Meissel
  2. Conspirators of Pleasure (1996) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  3. A life-action feature, black comedy about a group of loosely connected, "ordinary" people who feverishly engage in obsessive rituals: Mr Peony fashions a papier-mache rooster's head and bat wings made of umbrellas; his landlady inflicts punishment on a life-size rag doll's effigy of him; the newspap. Cast & Crew. Read More. Jan Svankmajer. Director

    • Jan Svankmajer
    • Petr Meissel
  4. Jan Švankmajer’s Conspirators Of Pleasure. This article has lots of crazy frilm stills, if you want to see a fully illustrated version click here - https://filmofileshideout.com/archives/jan-svankmajers-conspiracy-of-pleasure/ \ The adjective surreal gets thrown around quite a bit but Jan Švankmajer truly fits the bill.

  5. Jan 1, 2000. Rated: A- • Jan 1, 2000. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Advertise With Us. Six Prague residents pursue bizarre rituals. Mr. Peony (Petr Meissel) builds a chicken costume to wear while...

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    • Petr Meissel
    • Jan Svankmajer
    • Conspirators of Pleasure1
    • Conspirators of Pleasure2
    • Conspirators of Pleasure3
    • Conspirators of Pleasure4
  6. Jun 25, 2014 · Jan Švankmajer’s third feature film, Spiklenci slasti ( Conspirators of Pleasure, 1996), a dialogue-free black comedy aspiring to create a synaesthetic experience for its audience, concerns the blithely interconnected quests of six Prague denizens for onanistic bliss in an elaborate autoerotic roundelay.

  7. December 8–9, 2012. Jan Svankmajer: Conspirator of Pleasure. Jan Svankmajer’s beginnings as a filmmaker date from the Prague Spring of 1968. Czechoslovakia’s own New Wave cinema had already been flourishing for a few years.