Vilma Jamnická

Birth : 1906-11-13,

Death : 2008-08-12

Movies

Kovladov dar
Dlhý, Široký, Bystrozraký
Kmotor Remenár a kmotor Hrebenár
It's Better to Be Healthy and Wealthy than Poor and Sick
Margita
A satiric tragi-comedy about two women and their lover Robert who is an emigrant that keeps coming back. This film shows chaotic post-communist Europe after the fall of totalitarianism. Two opposite characters, women, meet during the Velvet Revolution in November 1989. Intellectual dissident Nona and a Communist secret police boss’ mistress Ester. They meet at an anti-regime demonstration and become friends. They don’t want anything to do with politics, both want to get married and have kids, but also get rich. Crazy plans and risky attempts to realize their shared dreams land them in many sticky situations in the post-revolution chaos. Too much money gets in the way of the power of friendship.
Dúhová cesta
Prstienky z kukučiny
Boy's Vacation
Vilma Jamnická
A father/son get-together trying, in their inept way, to do some repair work to their home that they have out in the country.
Hody
Magduška
Múdry Maťko a blázni
ženička
Hlúpa rozprávka
Najstarší zo všetkých vrabcov
Biela stužka v tvojich vlasoch
Racha, My Love
Grandma
Visiting Slovakian Racha to get antiquated with Slovakian wine-making techniques, Rachvelian from Georgia, Zauri, falls in love with Slovak Darina. Consequentially, when Darina visits Georgia, Zauri does his best to make her also love him.
Amok
Dobrý deň, stará mama
Kto odchádza v daždi...
Križanová
Big Night and Big Day
Old Krnáčová (voice)
Slovakian villagers towards the end of WW II are despairing as German troops fall back to their village.
Do zbrane, kuruci
Rozhodnutie
Návšteva
Páni sa zabávajú
Krútňava
Janitor
If I Had a Gun
Marina / Vlado's Grandma (voice)
Vlado, an intelligent boy living in a small village, has fantasies that take him away from his humdrum life. But as the Nazi occupation begins to encroach on the townsfolk his fantasies and reality begin to merge.
Kára
Líšky, dobrú noc
Kubo
cigánka Dora
Ivanov
Jánošík
Slepá Baba
This film is one of the most popular pictures of Slovak cinema and relates the story about the legendary folk hero and brigand Juro Jánošík [1688-1713] and the social situation in Slovakia of the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The first part talks about Jánošík's childhood, studies and return to his native village. In the second part Jánošík leaves for the hills, where he organizes his band of brigands and starts an anti-feudal resistance. The film concludes with Jánošík's execution.
Ivan
Smrť sa volá Engelchen
Kapitán Dabač
V hodine dvanástej
Misko's mother
Náš školník
The Wooden Village
Slovak movie is based on the novel by the prominent representative of Slovak prose František Hečka, who was in 1952 awarded the State Prize. The novel and the movie successfully capture the development of Slovak village after the liberation in 1945. The narrative is centred around the characters of the old Púplava, who after the liberation begins to organise a new village life, and his struggle for the construction of settlements Mrzáčky, burnt by the fascists. It is centred around the conflict, greatly reflecting the situation of the countryside at this time: the conflict between the rural poor and the rural rich. In the movie, a rich personal and emotional life of other heroes pulsate besides the main storyline. The movie ends with the final defeat of the reactionary forces by Communists in February 1948, taking over all power in the state of workers and peasants. - "The Wooden Village" is released in celebration of the 7th anniversary of the Communist February Victory.