Monday, April 30 @ 7:00 PM / Music Box Theatre — 3733 N Southport Ave
Tickets: $11 at the door or purchase in advance

DAISIES
Directed by Věra Chytilová • 1966
In Czech with English subtitles
“We exist! We exist! We exist!” Věra Chytilová’s Daisies bursts with chaotic energy and vivid color, turning each frame into a bold statement of rebellion and laying the groundwork for Czech New Wave cinema. Chytilová described her film as a “philosophical documentary in the form of a farce,” an experimental and psychedelic protest against consumerism, censorship, and authoritarian control. The mischievous and insatiable Marie I and Marie II revel in destruction and excess, daring viewers to decode the political nuance within their antics, all delivered with a heaping dose of subjective realism. In electric montages swirling with surreal imagery, they lounge in bed, create messes, gleefully take advantage of men, and mock the very idea of order and decorum. A film filled with cut-up sausages, eggs, and fragmented bodies, Daisies critiques gender roles, societal expectations, and commodification, all in the guise of chaotic absurdity. To engage with this film, peeling back layers of subtext from its wild exterior, is to expand the limits of our interpretive imaginations. Czechoslovak government officials took a narrower view, threatening to ban the film from distribution for disrespecting the farmers who produced the food “wasted” during the production. Daisies endures as a manifestation of anarchistic feminism and as a radical exhortation to challenge societal norms and power structures. (TV)
75 min • Filmové studio Barrandov • 35mm from Janus Films
Preceded by: “Pests for Guests” (Friz Freleng, 1955) – 7 min – 35mm
NEXT UP: CORN’S-A-POPPIN’ on Wednesday, May 7 at NEIU