The Firemen's Ball Movie Review
The Firemen's Ball Review
"The Firemen's Ball" Overview

Rating: NR
1967
Cast and Crew
Director : Milos FormanProducer : Rudolf Hájek,Carlo Ponti
Screenwiter : Milos Forman,Jaroslav Papousek,Ivan Passer,Václav Sasek
Starring : Jan Vostrcil,Josef Sebanek,Josef Valnoha,Frantisek Debelka,Josef Kolb,Jan Stockl
You can almost smell the cabbage in Milos Forman's The Firemen's Ball, a lovely
little farce about a party for an 86-year-old fire marshall in a small Czech
town. The problems center around a beauty contest, designed to pick the girl
who will bestow an award to the elderly gentlemen -- only the girls aren't
exactly supermodels, and then, once they've finally been selected, they're too
afraid to go on stage. Other problems erupt (someone is stealing the prizes
for the lottery), until the party is interrupted by -- of all things -- a fire.
This 73 minute film is practically a trifle, hardly a masterpiece but
definitely the work of genius. Forman's social satire makes more sense in the
context of 1967 Czechoslovakia, which had a government in crisis much like the
firemen on parade in the film, on the eve of the country's invasion by Russia
and imminent conversion to communism. The film was reportedly "banned forever"
on the spot by the new regime. Apparently those Russkies were on to the movie,
too...
Forman fled Czechoslovakia shortly after making this film. His life experience
in a country none of us are likely to ever visit (and in fact, no longer really
exists) makes our lives all the richer.
Aka Horí, má panenko.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



