The Shop on Main Street

1965
8.2| 2h8m| en| More Info
Released: 09 September 1965 Released
Producted By: Filmové studio Barrandov
Country: Czechoslovakia
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

In a small town in Nazi-occupied Slovakia during World War II, decent but timid carpenter Tono is named "Aryan comptroller" of a button store owned by an old Jewish widow, Rozalie. Since the post comes with a salary and standing in the town's corrupt hierarchy, Tono wrestles with greed and guilt as he and Rozalie gradually befriend each other. When the authorities order all Jews in town to be rounded up, Tono faces a moral dilemma unlike any he's known before.

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Reviews

BootDigest Such a frustrating disappointment
Exoticalot People are voting emotionally.
Contentar Best movie of this year hands down!
Kinley This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
Vonia The Shop on Main Street (Czech/Slovak: Obchod na korze) (1965) Director: Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos Watched: May 29, 2018 Rating: 7/10 Loyal dog, kind friends, Greedy wife, quaint Slovak town. They were Tóno's World. Aryan owner, Naive Jewess shopkeeper, Unlikely friendship. Macro look at war, More profound and real Than frontline battles. Affecting acting, Camera as character, Well-timed reveries. Close call then fluke death felt cheap, Moral trap ends bittersweet. Haiku Sonnets are comprised of 4 3-line haiku plus a couplet of either 5 or 7 syllables, adding up to 14 lines, the same number of lines found in a sonnet. (5-7-5, 5-7-5, 5-7-5, 5-7-5, 7-7/5-5).
tieman64 With "The Shop on Main Street", director Jan Kadar takes us to 1940s Slovakia. Set in a small rural town during the deportation of Jews to Nazi concentration camps, the film revolves around Tono, a kind hearted carpenter.Tono spends his days playing with his dog and being pestered by the husband of his wife's sister, the local Fascist leader. Like most people in his village, Tono doesn't like the Fascists, but also doesn't do much to oppose them. He's timid, and like many rural persons during the era, doesn't quite understand what's going on around him anyway.When the Fascists begin turning Jews over to the Nazis, one Jewish shop, which sells buttons and trinkets, is left without an owner. Tono's Fascist brother-in-law thus gives the shop to Tono and appoints him "Aryan Overseer". Tono and his wife imagine that this will make them wealthy, but it turns out that the shop is still inhabited by its senile owner, an elderly Jewish lady called Mrs. Lautmann, who is poor and cannot make a living from her business.What's funny is that the Jewish lady is as confused as Tono is. She thinks he has come to her shop to act as an assistant, whilst he has no idea how to run a shop, let alone any inkling of the genocidal horrors blossoming all around him.Eventually Tono and Mrs Lautmann grow to be friends. He becomes a kind of duplicitous character, simultaneously working for the Fascists in their effort to remove Jews from the town, and for the Jewish community, which pays him to take care of the feeble Mrs. Lautmann. This scheming comes to an end however, when the Fascists finally order the deportation of all Jews, leaving Toto torn (ala another Holocaust movie, "Sophie's Choice" or even the dark kid's movie, "Battle for Terra") between three impulses: save Mrs Lautmann, save himself and his family, and a kind of fatalistic, feeling of absolute indifference.In one great sequence, Tono seems to hold all these feelings simultaneously. In a drunken stupor he fluctuates wildly from one position to the next, pushing the bewildered Mrs. Lautmann out into the streets, then locking her in a cupboard, then yanking her out again, unsure whether to sell out this little Jewish lady, and his soul in the process. The film's ultimate point, though, is that for all his heart, Tono can do nothing to derail history. History is a giant machine that rolls somewhere out beyond the grasp of men, comprehensible only in hindsight. The film ends, shockingly, with Tono's suicide and the death of Mrs Lautmann. We're then shown a nostalgic fantasy – which, in a way, satirises the end of "Schindler's List" decades before Spielberg's film was even made – in which Tono and Mrs. Lautmann, dressed in the finery of a pre-Fascist age, stroll merrily together through the streets, the hazy lighting indicating that such an ending is entirely wishful and counter-factual. Cinematic depictions of the Holocaust are problematic for two logically opposed, yet both entirely cogent, reasons. On the one hand, the horror of the event is banalized by any effort to represent it, making it proportional to all other events. Films like Claude Lanzmann's "Shoah", Lumet's "Pawnbroker", and in a way Mamet's "Homicide" and Kubrick's "Shining", are films that direct our attention to the unrepresentability of the Holocaust as its subject matter. On the other hand, and at the same time, the Holocaust gets thrown about as a token of high seriousness and good faith, and as a weapon to silence other concerns and other discourses (think the Ricky Gervais comedy sketch where Kate Winslet effortlessly wins Oscars through Holocaust films, or Jerry Lewis' Oscar bait, "The Day The Clown Cried"). Holocaust films win Oscars precisely because the subject matter itself is used to deflect any questions about aesthetic value and artistic integrity. "Schindler's List" exhibits both of these tendencies simultaneously. At the same time that "Schindler's List" relentlessly and aggressively banalizes the Holocaust — few set pieces are as condemned, by artists, directors and writers, as Schindler's List's shower sequence — the film also claims a moral authority from its subject matter that preempts all criticism in advance.So in a way, Kadar's film presents the anti-Schindler, shattering Spielberg's redemptive fable (Rivette: "Turning the Holocaust into a redemptive allegory is an offence without reprieve."). Tono's intentions cannot buffer the monstrous forces of Fascism and Nazism, let alone Stalinism, Maoism, American Slavery or the many other horrors of the last several hundred years. "The Shop on Main Street" reminds us — and this is a reminder that Americans need more than Europeans — that a good conscience, and a basic human decency, are not enough to save us.This is not defeatism or the admittance of a kind of individual, self-reflexive impotency, but rather a call for organisation. One man saving 1,100 Jews whilst the pointless, industrialised murder of six million occurs elsewhere, does not prove that people are "good" and "can make a difference". It proves people are brutes and that it often takes more than a molehill to stop a mountain. Human beings do indeed "make their own history", but, as Marx went on to say, "they do not make it just as they please." 8/10 – See David Mamet's "Homicide" and Marek Najbrt's "Protector".
imdbfriend Obchod na korze is a story of a simple man in a complex times. The time I am talking about is the WW II period when Hitler was exterminating Jews from Europe. This movie although not dealing much with the scenes from Jews struggle depicts a powerful story which shows us how some European civilians were with Hitler and how they helped him in his mission. Again this movie doesn't show all this as a main plot but indirectly like how the villagers submissively throws Jews out, takes their stores, and how they talk. This all gives us a little peak at the psyche of the people at that time but the movie doesn't overbear itself with such psychic and doesn't turn into a melodramatic, tissue grabber one, but depicts one man who is simple, not with any complications and who is not Jew takes into a Jewish old woman's store but with the help of others keep the old lady working in the store by not letting other anti-Jew know about the situation. I won't reveal much here but the movie is brilliant, and the actors are really good, especially the main male lead and the old woman in the store. This is not entertainer as the time it deals with is by no means entertaining but only horrifying and yet director, writers did their best in making this movie with a light humorous nature of the characters especially in their depiction of the Tono and Lautman. So you will laugh at times, feel bad at times, think about that period most of the time and then eventually you might cry at the end. This movie is that good. Watch it for your senses.
azfad This is one of the most emotionally powerful movies i have ever seen and I have no idea why isn't more well-known as it it should be. For me it carries more of a punch than 'Schindler's List' and in terms of anti-war films it is possibly the finest i have seen. I love the fact that the main character is just an everyday, little man just trying to get by who, over the course of the film gets provoked into action and not a 'hero' by any typical standards. The film has a down-to-earth tragic beauty that just really captures one's attention and the whole movie is utterly gripping and captivating.Amazing performances by the two main characters and a climax that just left me speechless - i can't recommend it highly enough. One of my top 10 movies ever made.