Cook F**K Kill

Cook F**K Kill
CzechŽáby bez jazyka
SlovakŽaby bez jazyka
Directed byMira Fornay
Written byMira Fornay
Produced byMira Fornay
Viktor Schwarcz
Starring
  • Jaroslav Plesl
  • Petra Fornayová
  • Regina Rázlová
  • Bohuslav Zárychta
  • Jan Alexander
  • Jazmína Cigánková
  • Irena Bendová
  • Roman Lipka
CinematographyTomás Sysel
Edited byMira Fornay
Production
company
Cineart TV Prague
Release dates
  • 23 November 2019 (2019-11-23) (Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival)
  • 15 October 2020 (2020-10-15) (Czech Republic)
Running time
116 minutes
CountriesCzech Republic
Slovakia
LanguageCzech

Cook F**K Kill (Czech title: Žáby bez jazyka, Slovak title: Žaby bez jazyka) is a 2019 Czech-Slovak comedy-drama film directed by Mira Fornay, starring Jaroslav Plesl, Petra Fornayová, Regina Rázlová, Bohuslav Zárychta, Jan Alexander, Jazmína Cigánková, Irena Bendová and Roman Lipka.

Cast

  • Jaroslav Plesl as Jaroslav K
  • Petra Fornayová as Jaroslav K zena
  • Regina Rázlová as Dorota
  • Bohuslav Zárychta as Gustáv
  • Jan Alexander as Kamil
  • Jazmína Cigánková as Blanka
  • Irena Bendová as Janka
  • Roman Lipka as Petr
  • Mária Surková as Starenka

Release

The film premiered at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival on 23 November 2019.[1]

Reception

Demetrios Matheou of Screen Daily called the film a "boldly-executed absurdist comedy, which tackles its central theme – domestic abuse – in a manner very different to the usual gritty realist approaches, with provocative, sometimes discomforting results."[1]

Martin Kudlac of ScreenAnarchy wrote that the film is an "original and fearless vision and formalistically idiosyncratic work, unsettling without being didactic, topical and timeless while addressing a pathology inherited within the society, eerie fatalism infused by dark humor."[2]

Alissa Simon of Variety wrote that while the film is a "tad too long and definitely not for everyone", it is "without doubt Fornay's most ambitious and stimulating work."[3]

References

  1. ^ a b Matheou, Demetrios (25 November 2019). "'Cook F*** Kill': Tallinn Review". Screen Daily. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  2. ^ Kudlac, Martin (24 February 2020). "Rotterdam 2020 Review: COOK, F**K, KILL, Greek Weird Wave Meets Psychomagical Realism". ScreenAnarchy. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  3. ^ Simon, Alissa (16 December 2019). "'Cook F**k Kill': Film Review". Variety. Retrieved 1 October 2023.