The film “Four White Shirts” by Latvian director Rolands Kalniņš, shot in 1967, was banned by Soviet censors for more than 20 years because of its rebellious spirit and an openly ironic look at the life in Latvia under the Soviet regime. Now it is shown at the 2018 Cannes festival alongside classics by Hitchcock, Kubrick, and Bergman, and is the first Baltic movie in history to appear in the "Cannes Classics" programme. Rolands Kalniņš, now 96, tells you more: www.festival-cannes.com/
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Apr 10, 2019
"Four White Shirts", 1967 film
The film “Four White Shirts” by Latvian director Rolands Kalniņš, shot in 1967, was banned by Soviet censors for more than 20 years because of its rebellious spirit and an openly ironic look at the life in Latvia under the Soviet regime. Now it is shown at the 2018 Cannes festival alongside classics by Hitchcock, Kubrick, and Bergman, and is the first Baltic movie in history to appear in the "Cannes Classics" programme. Rolands Kalniņš, now 96, tells you more: www.festival-cannes.com/
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