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Filming in Hungary: Blog

Follow our blog to stay up to date in topics related to the Hungarian film industry, film production in Hungary, and filming in Hungary.

The New Bauhaus: Doc Reassesses the Career of Moholy-Nagy

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Laszlo Moholy-Nagy was as great an artist as Picasso, and as much a visionary as Buckminster Fuller. At least this is what the film-makers behind The New Bauhaus want you to believe. The recently released documentary makes an attempt at not just casting Hungarian-born Moholy-Nagy as a great artist (this, is already widely acknowledged) but as one of the primary influencers of the art and design of the 20th Century.

It’s not entirely a controversial premise. His influence on fine art and industrial design are indisputable. But the film-makers argue that his greatest impact was in his process, not in his results. As the founder of a school: The New Bauhaus school in Chicago, USA, Moholy-Nagy was as much a purveyor of thought and ideas as he was a fine artist.

Born László Weisz in 1895 in the Hungarian town of Bácsborsód, Moholy-Nagy was of Jewish decent. He would later take the family name of his uncle, Nagy, and add the name Moholy to honour the town of Mohol (in present day Serbia) where he spent childhood summers. A soldier who dabbled in drawing, Moholy-Nagy moved first to Vienna, then to Berlin to expand his horizons beyond Hungary. He found quick success, and before long was teaching at the famous Bauhaus School in the Weimar Republic. During this fecund period, he became proficient at photography, typography, sculpture, painting, printmaking, film-making, and industrial design.

But his true genius was revealed when he was brought to Chicago in 1937 to head the New Bauhaus School. Though short-lived, his work there and at subsequent art schools in the States would leave an indelible mark on industrial design. For instance, we can credit the iconic bear-shaped honey jar to Moholy-Nagy’s schools, and the trademark shape of a bar of Dove soap. All the while, his photograms and other artistic works were widely shown and sought after by collectors.

Buried in Chicago, Moholy-Nagy died young, succumbing to leukemia in 1945. As Art News sums up the The New Bauhaus’ premise: “Yet as The New Bauhaus argues, the less visible aspects of Moholy-Nagy’s influence—the people he touched and the artists he fostered—are what make him important. He would have likely agreed with this documentary’s stance. As he once said, “I do not believe in art so much as mankind. Man reveals himself. Much of it is art.”

The New Bauhaus is available on various streaming sites, but the trailer is available here:

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Zsa Zsa Gabor Returns to Rest in Budapest

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Zsa Zsa Gabor via Wikipedia Commons

Zsa Zsa Gabor via Wikipedia Commons

The late, great, Zsa Zsa Gabor, the Hungarian bombshell who became a Hollywood icon, has finally returned to Budapest, after her ashes were flown from the Untied States. Gabor (Gábor, in Hungarian), was known for her larger-than-life persona, seductive Hungarian accent, nine marriages, and sassy one-liners. Now buried at the Kerepesi Cemetery, in the section reserved for famous actors and actresses, Gabor, despite living much of her life in Los Angeles, insisted upon Budapest as her final resting place. “She was first class, she had her own seat and she had her passport, everything there. It was her last trip, she always used to go first class, she had her champagne, caviar….,” her final husband, Frederic Prinz von Anhalt, told Reuters, of her journey. “And then we arrived in Budapest. That’s what she wanted and that’s what she had in her last will. She definitely wanted to be in Budapest because her father is buried here too.”

Born Sari Gabor in Budapest in 1917, she initially lived the life of a socialite, and was named Miss Hungary in 1936, eventually marrying a Turkish diplomat. As WWII approached, though, she abandoned him before she and her Jewish-born sisters Eva and Magda fled Hungary for the United States.

According the the Guardian: “Zsa Zsa Gabor appeared in more than 30 movies, including Moulin Rouge in 1952 and Lili in 1953. By the 1970s she began to reject smaller roles, saying: ‘I may be a character but I do not want to be a character actress.’ “ She was sought after for her good looks both on and off the screen. Magnate and Paris Hilton’s dad, Conrad Hilton was one of her more famous husbands. She once stated, "Men have always liked me and I have always liked men. But I like a mannish man, a man who knows how to talk to and treat a woman—not just a man with muscles."

Zsa Zsa’s sister, Eva, was equally famous, starring in the long running US sitcom Green Acres. Their lesser known sister, Magda, was also an actress. Zsa Zsa survived both sisters (and most of her husbands) by many years, living to near 100.

Gabor led an extraordinary life. Her biographer Gerald Frank summed her up best: “Zsa Zsa is unique. She's a woman from the court of Louis XV who has somehow managed to live in the 20th century, undamaged by the PTA ... She says she wants to be all the Pompadours and Du Barrys of history rolled into one, but she also says, ‘I always goof. I pay all my own bills. ... I want to choose the man. I do not permit men to choose me.’ “

Rest in peace, Zsa Zsa Gabor.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Ildikó Enyedi Returns to Cannes! The Blog Returns to Posting!

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Screenshot 2021-07-11 at 14.09.26.png

Hungarian director and local favorite, Ildikó Enyedi, is no stranger to the Cannes Film Festival. She is a one-time winner of the Golden Camera award for her 1989 feature film debut My 20th Century. Now, after a productive lockdown, Enyedi is in the running for the Palme d’Or with her latest film, The Story Of My Wife, which is set to have its world premiere in competition at the 74th Cannes Film Festival.

Enyedi’s previous film, 2017’s On Body And Soul, was an international critical success, winning the coveted Golden Bear, the Berlin International Film Festival’s main prize, and was also a Best Foreign Language Film nomination at that year’s Oscars. The film continues to enjoy a long life on Netflix, and has introduced a new generation of viewers to her work.

Her latest, The Story Of My Wife, is an adaptation of the 1942 novel of the same name by Hungarian writer Milán Füst. Following is the official synopsis from the Cannes press material: Jacob Störr, a sea captain, makes a bet in a café with a friend to marry the first woman who enters the place. And in walks Lizzy.

Enyedi disclosed that the book was one of her childhood favorites.  In a lengthy, recent interview, she told The Hollywood Reporter about her fascination with the book: “The Story of My Wife: The Reminiscences of Captain Storr is a very well-known book. It is quite famous in Hungary and also internationally. It was translated into many languages, but somehow it is not a hit, an easy read.

And it has been quite misunderstood. It’s praised, in my opinion, for the wrong things. It is beautifully written, so everyone praises it for how it is written. Or they just consider the plot of the story – which is very colorful, very lush, very rich and meandering, a One Thousand and One Nights story, and also a passionate love story.

But this writer who was, by the way, a Jewish writer, wrote this book during the Second World War in Budapest when his own life was in danger. The essence of the book, for this guy, sitting in Budapest when the bombs are falling outside as he works on this, is not the love story. It’s about this search of how to live our life, our tiny, very fragile life. And he says, in more than 400 pages, that trying to control our lives, to have control, is the wrong approach. That you have to accept and appreciate that you cannot control life. That life is more elusive, more secretive.”

Up against a diverse selection for the main prize, with Spike Lee as this year’s jury president, nobody can predict how Story of My Wife will fare, but no doubt everybody will agree that a ‘live’ Cannes is something to celebrate, as is Enyedi’s retrun to directing. Below find the English language trailer to Story of My Wife.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

5 Great Hungarian Products

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via Wikipedia Commons

via Wikipedia Commons

Breaking: Hungary doesn’t just make great films. As millions of travellers and tourists know, Hungary also has a lot of goods on offer that are peerless…which is to say, distinctly Hungarian. Have a look below for some of the wonderful things you can buy once you are lucky enough to cross the border into Hungary.

5. Tokaj Aszú: Perhaps the ‘wine of kings’ is virtually unknown in places like America because they have no tradition of royalty, or due to the fact that dessert wines don’t figure into many contemporary menus. Or perhaps it is the price that is prohibitive, a modest 3 puttonyos bottle could set you back close to a hundred dollars at a wine shop. But in Hungary, Tokaj Aszú – made from grapes that have attained a ‘noble rot ‘ on the vine – is available relatively inexpensively by the bottle – or by the glass at any of any upscale bar.

4. Tisza Trainers: Retro-hip has never been cooler in Budapest, especially to a generation that is discovering kitsch and didn’t have to endure the repression of the Soviet-imposed socialist regime. This re-fangled brand of shoe updates the omnipresent state-owned Tisza trainer, to fantastic results. It is only a matter of time before Millennial shoe fetishists catch on.

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3. Szatmári plumb jam. As we posted before, this distinctly Hungarian delicacy, made from Hungarian ‘Nemtudom’ or, ‘I Don’t Know’ plumbs, is so dense and packed with bitter sweetness it could pass as chocolate. Hungarians are rightly proud of this jam, and it turns out, so are the Japanese, who have developed a taste for the product as an import.

2. Mangalica pork: believe the hype. The rescue of this species of wooly pig from near extinction and its ascension as a sought-after gourmet foodstuff is already well documented, so much so that it has become popular to bash the trendy pig. But there is a good reason mangalica it has found its way onto the menus of the world’s most esteemed restaurants: the meat is beautifully marbled and fantastically rich. That’ll do, pig.

1. Le Parfum perfumes: Using scents of derived from such whimsical sources as absinthe and smoky lapsang souchong tea, Zsolt Zólyomi’s perfumes, which he creates for his own line as well as already existing brands, are inventive and exclusive. But expect no Eastern European budget shopping here: prices of his artisan perfumes run close to $ 150 for a 100-ml size bottle. The price of  Le Parfum may make you dizzy, but the scent will make you swoon.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Filmed in Hungary: 47 Ronin

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The Keanu Reeves-starring 47 Ronin, a martial-arts-based epic fantasy released in 2013, was for some, nothing to brag about. It went down as one of Reeves’ rare flops, and didn’t fare well with critics either. All that being said, over the years, Ronin has maintained and grown its fan base, and will now see its sequel produced as a series.

Shot near Budapest, Ronin’s huge production was accommodated by Origo Studios (along with UK’s Pinewood Studios) and their multiple state-of-the-art sound stages and back lots. The 150 million-plus dollar budget allowed for an entire feudal Japanese village to be built on the lot. Whatever snarky sites like Rotten Tomatoes criticised Ronin for, it wasn’t the spectacular sets and production. It more had to do with the difficulty many of the Japanese-speaking actors had with their lines; the convoluted plot, and struggle in making it a star vehicle for Reeves while respecting the ensemble cast that the material called for.

In the vein of Tom Cruise’s Last Samurai, 47 Ronin follows a troupe of Samurai as they venture through a magical, ancient world to avenge their master’s murder and free its people. Viewers complained it lost its thrust as an action film when it delved too deeply into drama, in the director’s attempt to emulate films like Gladiator.

Up-and-coming Director Ron Yuan has been brought on to helm the sequel. He stated this to to Deadline.com “I’m incredibly excited to be working with Universal and the producing team on this genre-blending, martial arts, action, horror and cyber-punk film. This will be a fun, intense, supercharged thrill ride for viewers globally.” Best known as an actor (Mulan) Yuan has directed well released several smaller-budget films like Unspoken: Diary of an Assassin. and Step Up China.

The as-of-yet untitled sequel differs from the original in a few ways. Foremost, it is set in the distant future, rather than the past. Secondly, filming took place in Bangkok, a city that also has its fair share of mystical charm. But this will only bolster 47 Ronin’s continued resurgence in the eyes of fans, and, who knows, possibly critics. You can look to a film like Buffy the Vampire Slayer as a good example of a hugely successful series based on a lackluster film.

Regardless, the success of Ronin in all its forms, reflects well on the quality of film production in Hungary. We wish all the Ronin good luck on their journey. Below find the trailer for the original 47 Ronin. Maligned, or misunderstood, you be the judge.

This post was based on reporting found on the site budapestreporter.com

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.


Four People Who You Might Not Have Known Love Budapest!

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Howl_and_Other_Poems_(first_edition).jpeg

It’s true! Many celebrities come to Budapest for business, but leave a piece of their heart here. It turns out Budapest appeals to a broad range of types, so let’s just have a look at a few famous people who openly love Budapsts.

1) Allen Ginsburg. America’s most famous beatnik poet, and for a long time, America’s most famous poet, spent a goodly amount of time in Budapest before the Iron Curtain fell. His volume Howl is no less famous here in Hungary, where it is known as Üvöltés. He was close friends with local hero Hobo Blues Band singer László Földes. The band honored Ginsburg with a song “Leples Bitang (Allen Ginsburg, the Shrouded Stranger)”. We’ll save you the time of searching for it on Youtube: watch and enjoy below.

2) Bobby Fischer: Bobby Fischer’s extreme views and mental demise made him something of a pariah for many years before his death. But there was a time when he was hailed as a Cold War warrior and US hero on the scale of medal-winning Olympic athletes. Falling afoul of the US authorities over playing a chess match in Serbia, thereby violating US sanctions, Fischer holed up in Budapest, where he became enamored with the chess scene and took to coaching chess prodigies, the Polgar sisters, in his free time. Says Susan Polgar in the Lubbock-Avalanche Journal, “After Bobby arrived to Budapest, I often drove him and his companions around, showing him my beautiful hometown. We often had lunch or dinner at our place, and went out to restaurants together, which was one of his favorite things to do. He was especially fond of caviar and Japanese cuisine. Another thing Bobby loved in Budapest was our world-famous mineral baths.” He eventually left Hungary for Iceland, but his legacy in Budapest lives on through those he played with.

via Wikipedia Commons By Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-76052-0335 / Kohls, Ulrich

via Wikipedia Commons By Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-76052-0335 / Kohls, Ulrich

3) Yoko Ono: Like Ginsberg, she discovered Budapest in the 1980s, and traveled here with her then boyfriend Sam Habitoy, an American of Hungarian decent. There was a rumor going around in the late 90s that she was trying to lease or buy the then-abandoned synagogue on Rumbach street. You can hear her singing her late husband’s song “Imagine” in Budapest in the video below (you know it’s Hungary, because she speaks through an interpreter) in 1986. Imagine that!

4) Alice Cooper. The dark lord of Heavy Metal has gone on record as having a case of the warm fuzzies for Budapest. Quoting his wife, he proclaims it is “more romantic than Paris. There is something about Budapest that is very warm.” We are still looking for the ‘Old Town’ maze he is referring to, but who are we to contradict a man who has been touring the world as a star act for over 40 years? Have a look at the full interview below, where he gushes about his fondness for the classical beauty of the city and its superior gulyás (no surprise, he likes it hot and spicy)!

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Jamie Lee Curtis in Back in Budapest

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Photo by Gage Skidmore  via Wikipedia Commons

Photo by Gage Skidmore via Wikipedia Commons

While the world continues to be hobbled by current circumstances, Budapest and Hungary remain a location dedicated to safe and efficient working conditions. As such, there continues to be a stream of stars in and out of Budapest; most recently, Ethan Hawke and actress Jamie Lee Curtis, the later known for her parts in the Halloween franchise, A Fish Called Wanda, and True Lies. But Curtis has the distinction of also actually being heretically Hungarian. Curtis is the daughter of Hollywood legend Tony Curtis, whose father was a Hungarian Jew that emigrated to the United States.

As it was Mother’s Day in American on May 1, Curtis wished her paternal grandmother, Helen Schwartz, a happy mother’s day in Hungarian, while looking out over the Danube and the Buda Palace. Curtis is here on business, though. She is currently shooting Borderlands with Kate Blanchett and Kevin Hart. This is an Eli Roth film, and based on the successful video game by the same name. According to Reporter Budapest, “Curtis will play Tannis, based on the character Dr. Patricia Tannis, an archeologist on the planet of Pandora, whose expertise could help lead to a mysterious vault filled with ancient alien technology.”

This isn’t Curtis’s first time in Budapest, and it’s worth noting that her father had a hand in the renovation of one of Budapest’s—and the world’s—most stunning pieces of architecture: the Great Synagogue on Dohány street in downtown Pest. Jamie Lee Curtis also reportedly continues to support the landmark’s development.

So, as we hit our stride as summer—and a more open country—approaches, let’s hope the success that brings actors like Curtis to Budapest and Hungary to film, continues.

via Jamie Lee Curtis’s Instagram account

via Jamie Lee Curtis’s Instagram account

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.


Pogácsa: The Hungarian Miracle Scone

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By Burrows - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/

By Burrows - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/

This post is based on the article Megtaláltuk a legfoszlósabb pogácsa módszerét by Ács Bori published in Telex.

In the origin story of the humble Hungarian scone called the pogácsa, a young man who set out on a long journey was given a bag of unleavened biscuits, baked in ash, by his mother to keep him from hunger and to offer to strangers who could help him. As such, the pogácsa came to represent nutrition, currency, and luck, and is thus present as a snack at most Hungarian ceremonies, from weddings to house parties.

The bready treat is also featured in many folk traditions. For instance, on the Name Day of Luca, a coin is hidden in a batch of pogácsa, and the one who discovers it is said to experience good luck for the year. Conversely, feathers, and the speed in which they burn down in a baking pogácsa, were once said to determine who was at risk of dying.

In reality, pogácsa shares lineage with flatbreads like focaccia (similar in sound), and are among the world’s oldest recorded bread recipes. It is surmised that the founding conquerers of the Carpathian Basin and Hungary sustained themselves on breads such as these: unleavened, baked in ash.

But just as Hungary has evolved, so has the pogácsa. What we call pogácsa today stands in stark contrast to the scones of our ancestors. No longer a flatbread, it rises in the oven, and is made with more decadent ingredients like butter and lard, not to mention eggs. The dough in modern pogácsa ferments and rises with yeast. In the days of yore, cheese pogácsa were not an option, while they are now a standard. Modern recipes are in fact quite diverse, and can include sour cream, skim milk, etc. Unlike early pogácsa found in Transylvania, which might be sweetened with honey or sweet poppy, the pogácsa we know in Budapest is always savoury, and innovations come in the form of adding cracklings, cottage cheese, and other tasty delicacies.

If you are reading from abroad, and wondering why the pogácsa is not known to you—why this compact little scone with so much flavor and history is not world famous—the answer is simple: the pogácsa does not lend itself to industrial production. Most pogácsa in Hungary are baked—with love—at home, or in corner bakeries. Like with most simple, but perfect foods, it is the sum of its ingredients: great butter and cheese, folded by hand. A pogácsa is as particular as a personality. What’s good for one, is not good for all.

Have you tried pogácsa? Do you like them big and fluffy, or small and bite-sized?

Below find a pogacsa-baking demonstration in English.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.







A Hungarian Abroad: The Spectacular Life of Arthur Koestler

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via Wikipedia Commons By Eric Koch / Anefo - Nationaal Archief, CC BY-SA 3.0,

via Wikipedia Commons By Eric Koch / Anefo - Nationaal Archief, CC BY-SA 3.0,

Hungarian writers are widely respected within their own country, but the truth is that only a minority break out beyond these borders into world-wide fame. One author who managed to achieve international recognition – and indeed – become part of the Western canon of literature, is Arthur Koestler (born Kösztler Artur in Budapest in the year 1905).  It would be nice to tout Koestler’s Hungarian upbringing as a huge influence on his body of work, but the writer, in his formative years, was educated mostly in Austria, and Germany. He spent much of his later life in Israel and Western Europe, and finally Great Britain, where he died in 1983.

Like most famous Hungarians, Koestler was adventurous and traveled widely, leaving his homeland behind early on. Just months before graduating from technical university, Koestler burned his school records, grades, test scores and all, making graduation impossible. Not long after this reckless act of youth, he hit the road, eventually landing in the former Palestine, where he was able to make an occasional living as a journalist. Along the way, Koestler became attracted to the Communist cause, and upon return to Europe in 1931, joined the Communist Party of Germany. With a life-long taste for danger and fairness, Koestler traveled to Paris then Spain to fight against Franco’s fascist regime. While working as a correspondent, he was captured, imprisoned, and sentenced to death, making him one of the few literary greats to have experienced death row. Freed under a prisoner swap, Koestler would later write about his experiences awaiting execution in his book Dialogue with Death.

In keeping with his non-traditional route to literary fame, Koestler penned a highly successful ‘sex dictionary’ called The Encyclopedia of Sexual Knowledge. But the sexual hi-jinks were just a cover for Koestler’s real work: it would not be long until he set to work on Darkness at Noon, his scathing look at the atrocities committed by Stalin in the name of Socialism. So inflammatory was the material that the manuscript had to be smuggled out of France, and into England, where it found its first publication. The book was incredibly influential in shaping Western attitudes towards the Soviet Union, and has since been recognized as a classic.

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Koestler wrote numerous other books, and continued to be politically active throughout his entire life. Authors like Salmon Rushdie cite him as an influence in their work. Koestler was a life-long believer in Zionism and progressive causes like the banning of the death penalty, and even animal rights. Decisive, fearless, pragmatic: he took his own life when he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. Koestler died in  England in a double suicide with his wife in 1983. His influence is still felt today, and a statue of him was recently erected on Andrássy Avenue, paying tribute to a native son who found fame abroad.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Olympic Dreams: Bid Video Still Golden

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By © Marie-Lan Nguyen / Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.

By © Marie-Lan Nguyen / Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.

Hungary is traditionally a strong competitor in summer Olympic games. For a small country, Hungary excels at multiple sports. Its greatest accomplishments have come in fencing, which enjoys a long tradition in Hungary. For a long time, the country was also dominant in water polo, and routinely offers winning swimmers and canoers. The country even competed in the inaugural 1896 Games and has sent athletes to most Olympics since.

According to Wikipedia, “Hungary has won more Olympic medals than any other existing nation that has never hosted the Games and has the second highest all time number of gold medals per capita of any nation behind only Finland.”

That’s a pretty big accomplishment. While it’s been some time since Budapest learned it didn’t make the final round to host the 2024 Olympics, that’s no reason not to continue to promote the Olympic bid video, which showcases so many great aspects of life and culture in Budapest. The video doesn’t directly promote the sports Hungary is good at, but rather the culture of Budapest, which is active and textured. Here you have street ballerinas, restaurant scenes, and if cafe culture were an Olympic sport, for sure we would win the gold.

So despite not bringing home the 2024 games to Budapest, it’s fair to say the video brings glory to the city. Enjoy below, with a groovy soundtrack by Hungarian pop band Mary PopKids.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Game of Thrones: the Hungarian Connections

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Anybody who has an interest in the fantasy genre, or is up on the best series of the past decade, has seen or read Game of Thrones. And if you are new to the books, and have a passing knowledge of Hungarian, you will note a few Hungarian names in the opening chapters, most notably ‘Sándor,’ which is the Hungarian version of Alexander. While there is no evidence author George R.R. Martin had a past with Hungary that he wanted to memorialize, it wouldn’t be the first time a fantasy writer appropriated the mystical atmosphere attributed to Hungary. No other than JK Rowling named a breed of dragon the ‘Hungarian Horntail.’

Though the series wasn’t shot here, because the local film industry has over the years been so successful in attracting foreign productions, many of the stars from Game of Thrones have spent time in Budapest filming other projects. Most prominently Jason Momoa, who played Khal Drogo, a character with ruthless Attila the Hun-like qualities, was in Budapest more than once in recent years.

Momoa was brought to Budapest for the filming of the remake of Dune, which is scheduled for release in September of this year. The actor was here even during the pandemic, as late as August 2020. While in Budapest, Momoa took advantage of all the city had to offer, and posted many snaps of him and his family in front of touristed sites like the Basilica and Parliament. But Momoa took away a piece of Budapest that few visiting stars can also claim: he got tattooed here.

Momoa and family in front of Parliament via Instagram

Momoa and family in front of Parliament via Instagram

Momoa plays a heavy in the series, but it turns out, a group of Hungarian actors working as stand-ins took many of the hits in battle scenes, winning a SAG award for their work. Hungary Today reports: “Stand-ins playing in HBO’s fantasy drama series Game of Thrones have won the US Screen Actors Guild’s prize for their oustanding stunt performance for the fourth time in a row since 2012. Hungarian Domonkos Párdányi and his team are among this year’s winners, and for many of them, this is already the second SAG Award during their career. Mr. Párdányi, who stood in for Brad Pitt in the film Troy, was doubling Christian Bale in Exodus during the shooting of the fourth season, meaning that he is not among those awarded.”

So, while Game of Thrones was not indeed filmed in Hungary, like with many pop culture franchises today, Hungary left its mark.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Natural Light to Shine in Berlin

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The Berlin International Film Festival, to be held in early March, will continue its reputation for showcasing challenging European cinema, with the premier of Hungarian Dénes Nagy’s feature Natural Light (Természetes fény). This marks the first full-length narrative film by the writer/director, whose previous shorts include documentaries Harm and Another Hungary. His TV documentary short, Soft Rain, premiered at the Cannes Festival’s 2013 Directors’ Fortnight.

As per the film festival’s website, the summary of Natural Light is as follows: World War II, occupied Soviet Union. István Semetka is a simple Hungarian farmer who serves as a Caporal in a special unit scouting for partisan groups. On their way to a remote village, his company falls under enemy fire. As the commander is killed, Semetka has to overcome his fears and take command of the unit as he is dragged into a chaos that he cannot control.

In his director’s statement (via Daily Variety) Nagy commented: “I wanted to observe a man who is not fully aware of what choices he must face. What are the things that lead him to becoming part of a killing? What choices he didn’t make on the way? This is interesting for me. And there is no clear answer to this. We think that we have acquired a clear judgment about things around us, we believe that we know what’s our task in life. The film wants to question this image of ourselves. It wants to show how fragile this image is.”

Daily Variety calls the trailer for the film ‘shocking’, and in its review of Natural Light, singles out the cinematography for praise: “Tamás Dobos’ majestically composed cinematography elicits detached admiration, its stillness furthering the sense of entrapment.”

All in all, this is an impressive start for the film, which will see a broader release later in the year. Below find the trailer for Natural Light, complete with English language subtitles.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Vanished Budapest: An Animated Look at the Past

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Some believe history isn’t static, but a living breathing thing.

It was our luck to stumble upon the two videos below, which feature old shots of Budapest that have been animated by the wizards of Animatiqua, an animation/film/design studio in Budapest. Each video presents structures in Budapest that were either destroyed in war or torn down to make way for something more modern. The animation, which is subtle and elegant, breathes life into the past, and gives the viewer a glimpse into Budapest’s rich architectural history.

According to Daily News Hungary, you will find, “among other things, the old National Theater in all its splendor, as well as the Hungária Nagyszálló on the quay of Pest, the old Elizabeth Bridge, the St. Demeter Church in Döbrentei Square, Kálvin Square and Lloyd Palace, which was the most beautiful classicist-style palace in the capital.”

But it’s one thing to talk about the past, it’s another to experience it. So, with no further delay, enjoy this window on vanished Budapest:

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

The Return of the Undesirable: A Hungarian Classic Found

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The history of film in Hungary is almost as long as the history of film itself. This is a nation that prides itself on its record of technical innovations and challenging narrative techniques. The country’s rich cinematic past twines with its technology-savvy present now that the reels of Michael Curtiz’s A Tolonc (The Undesirable) has been restored and digitally remastered at Budapest’s National Digital Archive and Film Institute.

The Undesirable is one of the many lost films of Hungary’s golden age of silent film, and represents one of the first directorial efforts from Michael Curtiz, who went on to achieve international fame as the director of such films as CasablancaMildred Pierce, and The Jazz Singer. His hundred-year-old silent film was discovered in the basement of the Hungarian House, a cultural center in New York City. How it got there is still unknown, but great efforts have been made to return the film to its homeland. The undertaking of returning and restoring the film, at a cost of close to 50,000 Euro, was funded by the Hungarian National Film Foundation, and overseen by Terminator and Rambo producer, and HNFF head honcho, the late Andrew Vajna.

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Curtiz, born Manó Kaminer Kertész, shot the film in 1914 in the then Hungarian-ruled city of Kolozsvár, (now also known as Cluj-Napoca, Romania). Shooting for the film was completed in the summer before the outbreak of WWI. There is evidence that the film was shown in the United States in the 1920s. This would make it one of Hungary’s first releases into the US market.

Some years back there was a theatrical showing in Budapest to celebrate the film’s 100 year anniversary, offering a fine homecoming for a film that spent so long abroad. These days, you can find scenes from the remastered A Tolonc posted on You Tube. We saved you the trouble of looking that up, and posted one very well-restored scene below.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Szatmári Szilva Heads East: The Hungarian Plum Set To Conquer Japan

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via https://www.agrarszektor.hu/

via https://www.agrarszektor.hu/

Szatmári szilva lekvár, or Szatmári plum jam, is a product that falls into the category known as ‘Hungaricum,’ or, things that have a strong national Hungarian identity. Paprika from around Szeged, and Bikavér, or Bull’s Blood wine, are other examples. Szatmári plum jam originates in historically Hungarian Transylvania. The town of Szatmár in Romanian is Satu Mare. Szatmár is also a county in Hungary. Close to each other geographically, both offer Szatmár plum jams.

The tradition of plum-jam making in the Szatmár region dates back hundreds of years. The special plums are known for being both small and packed with flavour, making them popular for use in the Hungarian fruit brandy pálinka, as well as the famous Szatmár jam. It’s the jam that has taken the interest of a Japanese importer, who has ordered a ton of the product after discovering it at the Foodex Japanese food industry exhibition for the first time in 2019.

Plums are popular fruit in Japan, but there is as of yet no jam similar to the rich Szatmári plum jam in the country. Nor are there many plum jams anywhere much like the Szatmári plum: the jam is cooked over a long period of time — sometimes days — until it has a dense consistency and flavour some compare to a rich chocolate paste. Its uniqueness is also attributed to the method by which it is cooked: using ‘dry preservation’ then cooking in a copper cauldron. The sweetness comes from the plum itself: traditionally there is no sugar added to the jams.

With their love of delicate pastries, we can only imagine what the Japanese will make of it when they try szilva gömböc, or famous—and delicious—Hungarian plum dumplings. As for the pálinka, we are keeping it for ourselves.

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Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Hungary's Oscar Nomination: “Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time"

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In the reent years, Hungary has made a strong showing in the Best International Feature Film category of the Academy Awards, with On Body and Soul making the final round, and Son of Saul winning the statue. This year’s official nomination was announced earlier this month: director Lili Horvath’s drama Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time.

Due to the pandemic, the film has had a quieter opening than other recently lauded Hungarian films, but has done well on the virtual festival circuit, winning multiple international awards. According to Hungarianinsider.com, “The film was screened with great success at the end of the summer at the Venice and then Toronto film festivals. In Antalya, Natasa Stork won the Best Actress award, and in Warsaw, the film was awarded the FIPRESCI Prize by the jury of the International Federation of Film Critics. She also won the grand prize “Gold Hugo” (Arany Hugó) at the longest-running festival in Chicago and returned home with three trophies from the highly prestigious Valladolid Film Festival in Spain. The film, set on the border of reality and imagination, won the Best Feature Film Award at the Philadelphia Film Festival as well.”

Rogerebert.com, in a glowing review, summarises the film as such: “Exemplary neurosurgeon Márta Vizy (Natasa Stork), for whom reality is increasingly becoming elusive, flies back home to Hungary from the U.S. after 20 years. Her return isn't prompted by a longing for homeland or even family, so much as a love pact she made with a fellow Hungarian doctor named János (Viktor Bodó) after they met and fell in love at a convention in New Jersey. The deal was to meet at Liberty Bridge in Budapest a month later. She kept the promise, he didn't. Instead of coming to terms with the ill-advised impulse behind traveling half the world for a spontaneous rendezvous with a stranger, Márta searches for János, only to learn he doesn’t recognize her.”

Natasa Stork

Natasa Stork

Reviews elsewhere, including in the New York Times, have for the most part been enviable. Daily Variety wrote: “Slippery, supple and sinuous, Hungarian director Lili Horvát’s deliciously reworked psychological noir is a spiral staircase, polished to a glossy shine, down which unreliable motivations, self-delusions and romantic obsessions tumble in gorgeous 35mm.” It goes on to praise — as many other publications have — the work of DP Róbert Maly. “The mood of ‘Preparations…’ is established by DP Róbert Maly’s striking 35mm cinematography, with its warm grain and textural response to color.”

This is only Horvát’s second feature. Her first, Szerdai Gyerek (The Wednesday Child) also performed well, winning awards at Karlovy Vary and multiple other festivals. Only time will tell if '“Preparations…” will have Oscar success. Either way, the film is a rare crowd-pleaser that was also embraced by critics. The Oscar winners will be revealed at the presentation ceremony on April 25 in Los Angeles.

Below, find the trailer for Preparations to be Together for an Unknown Period of Time in Hungarian with English language subtitles.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Hungarians in Hollywood: Steven Bognar and "American Factory"

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Screenshot via Youtube

Screenshot via Youtube

It’s not news that there are deep Hungarian roots running through Hollywood: from William Fox, the founder of 20th Century Fox, up to Jaimie Lee Curtis. But beyond the glitz of movie stars and feature films, Hungarians have also found success in the prestigious world of documentary filmmaking. You need only look as far as last year’s Oscars, where the son of Hungarian immigrants won Best Documentary Feature, along with his wife, Julia Reichert, for "American Factory.”

Like many Hungarians, Bognar’s immigrant parents found their way to the Midwest of the United States, first to Milwaukee and then Ohio, where Bognar’s late father, Bela J. Bognar, was a Professor at Wright State University. (He was known as ‘Professor Paprika’ to his students.)

Steven Bognar’s first feature length documentary, “Personal Belongings,” relates his father’s story: of his life in Hungary and the travails of World War II. “American Factory”, on the other hand, focuses on a General Motors factory in Moraine, Ohio, that was subsequently bought by the Chinese. According to The Atlantic: In 2014, Fuyao bought part of a closed General Motors assembly plant in Ohio and created thousands of jobs, revitalizing a local industrial sector that had fallen on desperately hard times when GM left town during the 2008 recession. American Factory charts the wave of exultation that greeted the arrival of Fuyao, followed by culture clashes, growing pains, and eventually forms of internal and external pushback that had been largely unknown to the company. “

The film struck a chord with viewers who are growing suspicious of the American Dream and ‘late-stage’ capitalism. The Atlantic went on to describe it as ‘captivating.’ Indeed, it before it won the Oscar, it won the respect of critics. The New York Times wrote: “American Factory” is political without being self-servingly didactic or strident, connecting the sociopolitical dots intelligently…”

American Factory premiered 2019 Sundance Festival and has been enjoying huge popularity on Netflix. Surprisingly, it was produced by former US president and First Lady, Barack and Michelle Obama, through their production company, Higher Ground Productions. With another Hungarian twist, the Oscar for Best Feature Length Documentary was presented by Hungarian actor Géza Röhrig, of Son of Saul fame.

Steven Bognar’s latest documentary is 9to5: The Story of a Movement (also made with Reichert), which revolves around an organisation dedicated to ensuring the rights of working women and and their families.

Below find the trailer for American Factory, which is still playing on Netflix.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Way Back Machine: Budapest from Before

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Once and a while a video showcasing the beauty and romance of Budapest comes along that is too irresistible not to share. But this one is truly rare: A colorized travel clip from 1938. This is – of course – interwar Budapest, and things were about to change dramatically for the country and city. But as much as they changed, and will continue to change, it is amazing just what has stayed the same. Keep an eye out for gorgeous shots of Parliament, Pest’s shopping boulevards, mineral water spas, the Chain Bridge, the Hotel Gellért and its artificial wave contraption, and the views of the Danube.

Now which was your favorite part? Ours was definitely the whole thing.

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Filmed in Hungary: Grizzly II, Revenge

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It’s hard to imagine a film that stars a young George Clooney, Charlie Sheen, and Laura Dern would go unfinished for 37 years, but that’s what happened with Grizzly II: Revenge. The partially made film, which was the stuff of Hollywood lore, was finally completed and released this year, after Hungarian producer Suzanne C. Nagy was able to finish the task she started so long ago.

But that’s getting ahead. Grizzly II is the sequel to Grizzly, a surprise smash-hit horror film that capitalized on the trend for deadly clawed and fanged animals, instigated by the film Jaws. For a reason that is still undisclosed in the media — but probably based on Nagy’s Hungarian connections — Grizzly II was shot in Socialist-era Hungary, making it one of the few (only?) Hollywood films to utilise Hungary as a location at that time. Local director André Szöts was called in to helm, a cast of English speaking actors—including Clooney, Sheen, and Dern— was flown over, a 16-foot mechanical grizzly bear/monster was assembled, and history was made.

The plot revolves around a Woodstock-like music festival held in the forrest, where a dangerous ‘devil-bear’ picks off concertgoers before it can be hunted and stopped. The producers actually organized a real rock festival for Hungarian youth, enlisting metal band Nazareth to perform in front of a 50,000 strong crowd.

It’s hard to pin down what went wrong with the production: there were reports of missing funds, of the mechanical bear constantly breaking down, of off-screen pressures from the secret police, that contributed to the film’s abandonment. Along the way, the original writer/director was replaced, as was Vilmos Zsigmond, who was first tipped as cinematographer. Ultimately, it took thirty-something years for a pirated rough cut to start making the rounds among horror afficionados. With much of the film already out there, Nagy had the film re-cut, and additional footage added, so as to make an official release of Grizzly II: Revenge. While the film has not exactly wowed critics, that’s hardly the point.

Though Grizzly II may have rode the coat-tails of films like Jaws and Piranha, it was way ahead of its time in using Hungary as a stand-in for another location: this one being an American national park. Yet, due to circumstances, this bear was trapped behind the Iron Curtain, until now. Nagy can also take some credit for opening avenues between Hollywood and Hungary, as she told film site theringer.com: “There was a hope, a wonderful idea, that the Hungarian film industry was going to be noticeable,” Nagy says of the early ’80s. “[The country] wanted a lot from me. I’d be opening a gate to Hollywood.”

So, as they say, all’s well that ends well.

Enjoy this trailer for Grizzly II: Revenge

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.

Hungarian Classic Now World Classic: Journey By Moonlight Seduces Literati

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Antal Szerb’s novel Journey By Moonlight is not be regarded by many to be Hungary’s greatest novel. It’s not the most erudite, decorated, or well known. But it is the favorite of any number of Hungarian romantics, and increasingly, of foreigners who came to the book in translation. While the British have been enjoying the Len Rix translation for many years, the novel was only released in America a few years back, by the ultra prestigious New York Review of Books.

It’s hard to overstate the effect Journey By Moonlight has on a certain type of reader (the same sort who obsess over The Secret History, or Master and Margarita). In its day, back in its day (published in 1937) it was rumoured to have incited more than one suicide.

The story follows a young man named Mihály on his honeymoon and eventual abandonment of his wife Erzsi, when the ghosts, both literal and figurative, of his past surface in locations across Italy. With its morbid, magnetic, and simultaneous attractions to love and death, Journey by Moonlight is easily compared to Death in Venice. But Journey by Moonlight is more pastoral, bubbling over with sticky sweet, but ultimately fatal nostalgia for youth and lost love; it actually has a lot in common with Haruki Murakami’s South of the Border West of the Sun.

Perhaps Journey by Moonlight has never been fully embraced as Hungary’s greatest novel because it was not based in Hungary. Antal Szerb was truly a novelist of the world, setting his first effort The Pendragon Legend in England, Journey by Moonlight in Italy, and Oliver VII in an imaginary European country. Unlike other Hungarian writers, his love of country was never expressed through meditations on Hungarian society, or via revolutionary poetry. Much like his stories, his patriotism was somehow not bound to such terrestrial conventions. A lot of good his subtlety did him; as an ethnic Jew, he was forced by the Hungarian facist Arrow Cross into a labor camp in 1944. Antal Szerb died before age 45, at the hands of his own countrymen. It should be pointed out that Szerb was given many chances to emigrate, even while he was enduring the degradations of labor camp, but he refused to leave his family and fellow writers behind. Unlike his protagonist, he never surrendered his ideals in the face of an uncaring and brutal world. He died the quiet death of an unsung hero. The world of literature is vastly richer for his brief journey through its midst.

Antal Szerb via Wikipedia

Antal Szerb via Wikipedia

Flatpack Films has many years of experience dedicated to offering expert servicing. It has brought the best of Hungary to countless brands, agencies, and production companies through its unique locations, exceptionally skilled crews, top of the line equipment and technical solutions. Backed by an impeccable track record, Flatpack Films has worked with world-class clients including Samsung, Samsonite, Toyota, Braun, Chivas Regal and many more - bringing their projects to life through a highly bespoke approach.