Radúz Činčera

Radúz Činčera (17 June 1923, Brno – 28 January 1999, Prague) was a Czech screenwriter and director, the conceiver of the legendary Kinoautomat.

Dr. Radúz Činčera

Career

Most of his life he worked in the Krátký film Praha (The Short Film of Prague) movie studio where he was author and director of a series of short documentary films.
Nevertheless, his most famous work is the Kinoautomat, the world's first interactive movie,[1][2] for the Czechoslovak Pavilion at Expo '67 in Montreal.[3]

Another big project of Radúz Činčera was The Sound Game Show at the Man and His World exhibition in Montreal in 1971. He also astonished the global audience with his audio-visual projects in Kobe, Japan and in Vancouver, British Columbia.
In the second half of the 1980s his multimedia music inscenation of the rock opera The Scroll was extremely successful in Canada.

Like some other Czech artists, Radúz Činčera's artistic and public work was restricted after the Soviet takeover of Czechoslovakia in 1968.[4]

Filmography

YearTitleFootageNotes
1954Kvety Tatiershortdramaturgic cooperation
1956Prečo kvitnúshortdirector
1964Romeo a Julie 63middledirector
1966Mlha (Documentary on Prague Divadlo Na zábradlí)shorttheme, screenplay, commentary
1966Kinoautomat Člověk a jeho důmfull-lengththeme
1966Jak Sammy o kalhotky přišelshortdirector
1968Stroskotáme zajtrashortcommentary
1969Documentary on the last moments of the comic duo Clow and Hamm, made to the 41. anniversary of the first sound filmshortdirector
1980O dětech a slovechshortdirector
1994Hudební laboratoř TV seriesdirector

References


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