| Lea | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Ivan Fila | 
| Produced by | Ivan Fila Eliska Sekavova Herbert Rimbach  | 
| Starring | Lenka Vlasakova Christian Redl Hanna Schygulla Miroslav Donutil  | 
| Music by | Petr Hapka | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 100 minutes | 
| Country | Czech Republic/France/Germany | 
Lea is a Czech drama film. It was released in 1997.
Plot
Lea witnesses her mother's rape and murder by her father as a child and because of it speaks very little and writes poems to her mother. Lea then grows up with foster parents in a different part of Slovakia. Strehlow buys Lea, now aged 21, from her foster father and imprisons her in a castle in Germany, using the same tools Lea's father used to control Lea as a child and to kill Lea's mother. As Strehlow learns more of Lea's past, he permits her to continue writing to her mother. Lea dies of a stroke within a year of living with Strehlow.
Cast
- Lenka Vlasakova.... as Lea
 - Christian Redl.... as Strehlow
 - Hanna Schygulla.... as Wanda
 - Miroslav Donutil.... as Gregor Palty
 - Udo Kier.... as Block
 - Gerd Lohmeyer.... as Postmaster
 - Tereza Vetrovska.... as Young Lea
 
Awards
- 1997 Angers European First Film Festival
 
- Won Audience Award for Feature Film (tied with Some Mother's Son)
 - Won C.I.C.A.E award
 - Won Telcipro award (tied with Pretty Village, Pretty Flame)
 
- 1997 Brussels International Film Festival
 
- Won Audience Award
 - Won Crystal Star Award for Best European Feature
 
- Cinequest San Jose Film Festival
 
- Won Best Feature Award
 - Nominated for Maverick Spirit Award
 
- 1998 Czech Lions
 
- Won Best Actress Award going to Lenka Vlasáková
 - Won Best Cinematography going to Vladimír Smutný
 - Nominated for Best Design Achievement going to Petr Kunc and Ludvík Široký
 - Nominated for Best Director going to Ivan Fila
 - Nominated for Best Editing going to Ivana Davidová
 - Nominated for Best Film
 - Nominated for Best Screenplay going to Ivan Fila
 - Nominated for Best Sound going to Marcel Spisak and Max Rammier-Rogall
 
- 1996 European Film Awards
 
- Nominated European Film Award for Best Young Film
 
- 1997 German Film Awards
 
- Nominated Gold Film Award for Outstanding Feature Film
 
- 1998 USA Golden Globe
 
- Nominated Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film
 
- 1997 London Film Festival
 
- Won Satyajit Ray Award
 
- 1997 Max Ophüls Festival
 
- Won Audience Award
 
- 1997 Sochi International Film Festival
 
- Won FIPRESCI Prize
 
- Nominated Bronze Horse Award
 
- 1997 Venice Film Festival
 
- Won OCIC Award in Honorable Mention
 
External links
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