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* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: When Michal attempts to rape Eliška at the sawmill, Joza promptly attacks him, breaks his arm and is only stopped from harming him any further when some three men proceed to restrain him.



* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: When Michal attempts to rape Eliška at the sawmill, Joza promptly attacks him, breaks his arm and is only stopped from harming him any further when some three men proceed to restrain him.

Added: 123

Removed: 122

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* KilledOffscreen: Slávek is mentioned to have been caught and executed by the Nazis for his work for the Czech Resistance.



* OffscreenDeath: Slávek is mentioned to have been caught and executed by the Nazis for his work for the Czech Resistance.

Added: 1946

Changed: 4775

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1943, in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia--in other words, the Czech half of Czechoslovakia, under occupation by the Nazis. Eliska is a nurse (she was a med student before the medical school closed) in Prague. She works alongside Richard, a surgeon, who is also her lover. When Eliska and Richard aren't having sex or working in the hospital, they are members of the Czech resistance.

One night Richard is called in to operate on Joza, a sawmill worker from the countryside who has been badly wounded in an accident at the mill. They save him, thanks in part to Eliska donating some blood.

Soon after, Eliska is sent to deliver a letter for LaResistance, only to find the Gestapo crawling all over the apartment building where she was supposed to meet her contact. She narrowly avoids arrest, then returns only for her Resistance contact Slavek to tell her that their Resistance cell has been broken by the Gestapo. Richard has fled the Protectorate, and Eliska must leave as well, immediately. He gives her false papers and a new identity with the fake name of "Hana", and tells her that she must leave Prague for the countryside, in the company of Joza the mill worker. As his wife.

to:

1943, in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia--in other words, the Czech half of Czechoslovakia, under occupation by the Nazis. Eliska Eliška is a nurse (she was a med student before the medical school closed) in Prague. She works alongside Richard, a surgeon, who is also her lover. When Eliska Eliška and Richard aren't having sex or working in the hospital, they are members of the Czech resistance.

One night Richard is called in to operate on Joza, a sawmill worker from the countryside who has been badly wounded in an accident at the mill. They save him, thanks in part to Eliska Eliška donating some blood.

Soon after, Eliska Eliška is sent to deliver a letter for LaResistance, only to find the Gestapo crawling all over the apartment building where she was supposed to meet her contact. She narrowly avoids arrest, then returns only for her Resistance contact Slavek Slávek to tell her that their Resistance cell has been broken by the Gestapo. Richard has fled the Protectorate, and Eliska Eliška must leave as well, immediately. He gives her false papers and a new identity with the fake name of "Hana", and tells her that she must leave Prague for the countryside, in the company of Joza the mill worker. As his wife.




* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Gestapo agent whom Eliska encounters on the stairs is "Gestapo agent" to a T, with a leather trenchcoat and a fedora. He even greets her in German with "''Guten morgen''." Of course, the Gestapo is searching the apartment building so they have no need for stealth.
* DeadGuyOnDisplay: A German specialty. Eliska sees a squad of Nazis forcing a terrified woman through the forest at gunpoint. She then sees a burnt-out cottage, turns, and sees the bodies of a man and two boys hanging from a tree.
* DistantFinale: At least ten years later (judging by the make of the car) Eliska returns to the village, once again with Richard. The old cottage she shared with Joza is now a crumbling ruin, but she's happy to find Lucka the midwife still alive, and they laugh together as the film ends.
* FishOutOfWater: Eliska--tall, good-looking, fashionably dressed, city girl--does not fit in very well in Želary where most of the women are short and squat and all the townspeople are simply-dressed peasants. She's further thrown for a loop when Joza takes her home to a cottage that has neither electricity nor indoor plumbing.
* GraveMarkingScene: Joza tells Eliska, "I'd like to show you to my mother. I'd like to tell her I'm married." Eliska is caught by surprise, and she's probably surprised again in the next scene when they are visiting his mother's grave.

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\n* TheAlcoholic: Michal, Lipka's abusive step-father, is constantly seen with a bottle of schnaps in his hand.
* BitchSlap: When arriving at the scene of Lipka's mother bleeding from miscarriage, Lucka the healer is thoroughly disgusted by the scene. When she discovers that the mother is in fact dying, she turns and gives Michal, who was too intoxicated to even call for help, four of these. He is so drunk and shamed that he can only collapse on the floor in response.
* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Gestapo agent whom Eliska Eliška encounters on the stairs is "Gestapo agent" to a T, with a leather trenchcoat and a fedora. He even greets her in German with "''Guten morgen''." Of course, the Gestapo is searching the apartment building so they have no need for stealth.
* DeadGuyOnDisplay: A German specialty. Eliska Eliška sees a squad of Nazis forcing a terrified woman through the forest at gunpoint. She then sees a burnt-out cottage, turns, and sees the bodies of a man and two boys hanging from a tree.
* DistantFinale: At least ten years later (judging by the make of the car) Eliska Eliška returns to the village, once again with Richard. The old cottage she shared with Joza is now a crumbling ruin, but she's happy to find Lucka the midwife still alive, and they laugh together as the film ends.
* FishOutOfWater: Eliska--tall, Eliška--tall, good-looking, fashionably dressed, city girl--does not fit in very well in Želary where most of the women are short and squat and all the townspeople are simply-dressed peasants. She's further thrown for a loop when Joza takes her home to a cottage that has neither electricity nor indoor plumbing.
* GraveMarkingScene: Joza tells Eliska, Eliška, "I'd like to show you to my mother. I'd like to tell her I'm married." Eliska Eliška is caught by surprise, and she's probably surprised again in the next scene when they are visiting his mother's grave.grave.
* IJustShotMarvinInTheFace: When a pair of Soviet soldiers make ruckus when they discover the hiding teacher in front of the church, the priest comes to investigate and one of the soldiers proceeds to instantly shoot him. The other soldier promptly scolds him for that.
* InTheBack: Young Gorčík ends up getting shot in the back while watching the attempted rape of Žeňa he set up. The Soviet soldier who does manage to successfully rape her later also gets shot in the back.



* LethalChef: Eliska makes Joza some sort of unappetizing potato mash concoction, then sheepisly says "I'm not used to the stove." Joza dutifully eats some, then puts some down for the dog--and the dog takes a pass.
* MarriageBeforeRomance: Joza and Eliska, total strangers to each other, get married because Eliska needs a place to hide immediately. Naturally, they fall in love.
* ThePlace: Želary, Joza's home town, where Eliska is sent on zero notice to live.
* RapeAsDrama: The Soviet troops that "liberate" the village get rapey the next morning under the influence of alcohol. A soldier tries to rape Marie, which leads to an outbreak of shooting in the town when Old Gorelik shoots him; another soldier does rape Zena.
* LaResistance: Only in the opening scenes, in which Eliska attempts to deliver a letter for the Resistance only to nearly get arrested. The rest of the film has her living under false papers in the countryside, as a mill worker's wife.
* ShotgunWedding: An unusual spin on this trope. Eliska is forced to marry Joza immediately, not because she is pregnant, but because she needs a place to hide from the Gestapo, and there is no other way that the citizens of the village will accept her.
* ShowerScene: There's a crude shower in the sawmill, which Eliska uses, in a scene that isn't very sexy as Michel barges in and tries to rape her. Joza saves her and gives Michel a beating.
* TableSpace: The awkwardness between Joza and Eliska on their first night at home together is demonstrated when they sit in silence, on opposite sides of the stove.
* TemptingFate: As Richard and Slavek are drilling Eliska on security precautions on how to deliver her letter--wait for the sound of the vacuum cleaner, enter at 5:03 exactly--she does a mental eye-roll and says everything is perfectly safe. She tells them "It's getting boring, gentlemen." Then she arrives at the apartment building only to find the Gestapo already in it.
* ThereIsOnlyOneBed: There ''is'' only one bed in Joza's cottage, which is why he crawls into it on his and Eliska's second night together, explaining that the bench is uncomfortable. She clutches a pair of scissors under her pillow, but he stays on his side.

to:

* LethalChef: Eliska Eliška makes Joza some sort of unappetizing potato mash concoction, then sheepisly says "I'm not used to the stove." Joza dutifully eats some, then puts some down for the dog--and the dog takes a pass.
* MarriageBeforeRomance: Joza and Eliska, Eliška, total strangers to each other, get married because Eliska Eliška needs a place to hide immediately. Naturally, they fall in love.
* OffingTheOffspring: Old Gorčík shoots his son when the latter sets up the rape of Žeňa by a Soviet soldier.
* OffscreenDeath: Slávek is mentioned to have been caught and executed by the Nazis for his work for the Czech Resistance.
* ThePlace: Želary, Joza's home town, where Eliska Eliška is sent on zero notice to live.
* RapeAsDrama: The Soviet troops that "liberate" the village get rapey the next morning under the influence of alcohol. A soldier tries to rape Marie, which leads to an outbreak of shooting in the town when Old Gorelik Gorčík shoots him; another soldier does rape Zena.
Žeňa.
* LaResistance: Only in the opening scenes, in which Eliska Eliška attempts to deliver a letter for the Resistance only to nearly get arrested. The rest of the film has her living under false papers in the countryside, as a mill worker's wife.
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: When Michal attempts to rape Eliška at the sawmill, Joza promptly attacks him, breaks his arm and is only stopped from harming him any further when some three men proceed to restrain him.
* ShotgunWedding: An unusual spin on this trope. Eliska Eliška is forced to marry Joza immediately, not because she is pregnant, but because she needs a place to hide from the Gestapo, and there is no other way that the citizens of the village will accept her.
* ShowerScene: There's a crude shower in the sawmill, which Eliska Eliška uses, in a scene that isn't very sexy as Michel Michal barges in and tries to rape her. Joza saves her and gives Michel Michal a beating.
* TableSpace: The awkwardness between Joza and Eliska Eliška on their first night at home together is demonstrated when they sit in silence, on opposite sides of the stove.
* TemptingFate: As Richard and Slavek Slávek are drilling Eliska Eliška on security precautions on how to deliver her letter--wait for the sound of the vacuum cleaner, enter at 5:03 exactly--she does a mental eye-roll and says everything is perfectly safe. She tells them "It's getting boring, gentlemen." Then she arrives at the apartment building only to find the Gestapo already in it.
* ThereIsOnlyOneBed: There ''is'' only one bed in Joza's cottage, which is why he crawls into it on his and Eliska's Eliška's second night together, explaining that the bench is uncomfortable. She clutches a pair of scissors under her pillow, but he stays on his side.



* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Eliska on her first night in Joza's cottage, as she changes for bed. Besides being fanservice it emphasizes her vulnerability, in a strange home with a man she doesn't know.

to:

* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Eliska Eliška on her first night in Joza's cottage, as she changes for bed. Besides being fanservice it emphasizes her vulnerability, in a strange home with a man she doesn't know.know.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: When he defends Žeňa from rape by shootinig his son and the Soviet soldier who cornered her, Old Gorčík causes the Red Army soldiers to think that the Nazis are attacking them, with the ensuing panic causing several other unnecessary deaths.
* WickedStepfather: Michal is one towards Lipka, having chased the boy out of his home and beating him savagely with his belt whenever he sees him return for some food.
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Spelling/grammar fix(es)


''Zelary'' is a 2003 film from the Czech Republic, directed by Ondřej Trojan.

to:

''Zelary'' ''Želary'' is a 2003 film from the Czech Republic, directed by Ondřej Trojan.



* FishOutOfWater: Eliska--tall, good-looking, fashionably dressed, city girl--does not fit in very well in Zelary where most of the women are short and squat and all the townspeople are simply-dressed peasants. She's further thrown for a loop when Joza takes her home to a cottage that has neither electricity nor indoor plumbing.

to:

* FishOutOfWater: Eliska--tall, good-looking, fashionably dressed, city girl--does not fit in very well in Zelary Želary where most of the women are short and squat and all the townspeople are simply-dressed peasants. She's further thrown for a loop when Joza takes her home to a cottage that has neither electricity nor indoor plumbing.



* ThePlace: Zelary, Joza's home town, where Eliska is sent on zero notice to live.

to:

* ThePlace: Zelary, Želary, Joza's home town, where Eliska is sent on zero notice to live.
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Added DiffLines:

* DistantFinale: At least ten years later (judging by the make of the car) Eliska returns to the village, once again with Richard. The old cottage she shared with Joza is now a crumbling ruin, but she's happy to find Lucka the midwife still alive, and they laugh together as the film ends.


Added DiffLines:

* RapeAsDrama: The Soviet troops that "liberate" the village get rapey the next morning under the influence of alcohol. A soldier tries to rape Marie, which leads to an outbreak of shooting in the town when Old Gorelik shoots him; another soldier does rape Zena.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Added DiffLines:

* TimeSkip: Major time skips from the opening part of the film, spring 1943, to Christmas 1943, then another to the spring of 1945 and the final act as the Red Army arrives.
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Added DiffLines:

* ShowerScene: There's a crude shower in the sawmill, which Eliska uses, in a scene that isn't very sexy as Michel barges in and tries to rape her. Joza saves her and gives Michel a beating.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* DeadGuyOnDisplay: A German specialty. Eliska sees a squad of Nazis forcing a terrified woman through the forest at gunpoint. She then sees a burnt-out cottage, turns, and sees the bodies of a man and two boys hanging from a tree.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* GraveMarkingScene: Joza tells Eliska, "I'd like to show you to my mother. I'd like to tell her I'm married." Eliska is caught by surprise, and she's probably surprised again in the next scene when they are visiting his mother's grave.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zelary_movie_poster_2003_1020257906.jpg]]
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Added DiffLines:

''Zelary'' is a 2003 film from the Czech Republic, directed by Ondřej Trojan.

1943, in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia--in other words, the Czech half of Czechoslovakia, under occupation by the Nazis. Eliska is a nurse (she was a med student before the medical school closed) in Prague. She works alongside Richard, a surgeon, who is also her lover. When Eliska and Richard aren't having sex or working in the hospital, they are members of the Czech resistance.

One night Richard is called in to operate on Joza, a sawmill worker from the countryside who has been badly wounded in an accident at the mill. They save him, thanks in part to Eliska donating some blood.

Soon after, Eliska is sent to deliver a letter for LaResistance, only to find the Gestapo crawling all over the apartment building where she was supposed to meet her contact. She narrowly avoids arrest, then returns only for her Resistance contact Slavek to tell her that their Resistance cell has been broken by the Gestapo. Richard has fled the Protectorate, and Eliska must leave as well, immediately. He gives her false papers and a new identity with the fake name of "Hana", and tells her that she must leave Prague for the countryside, in the company of Joza the mill worker. As his wife.

----
!!Tropes:

* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Gestapo agent whom Eliska encounters on the stairs is "Gestapo agent" to a T, with a leather trenchcoat and a fedora. He even greets her in German with "''Guten morgen''." Of course, the Gestapo is searching the apartment building so they have no need for stealth.
* FishOutOfWater: Eliska--tall, good-looking, fashionably dressed, city girl--does not fit in very well in Zelary where most of the women are short and squat and all the townspeople are simply-dressed peasants. She's further thrown for a loop when Joza takes her home to a cottage that has neither electricity nor indoor plumbing.
* INeedAFreakingDrink: The local fascist militia comes by one day to register "Hana" as a new citizen of the village. They check her (fake) documents, give her a ration book, and leave politely. After they're gone she takes a long pull from the bottle of vodka on the table.
* LethalChef: Eliska makes Joza some sort of unappetizing potato mash concoction, then sheepisly says "I'm not used to the stove." Joza dutifully eats some, then puts some down for the dog--and the dog takes a pass.
* MarriageBeforeRomance: Joza and Eliska, total strangers to each other, get married because Eliska needs a place to hide immediately. Naturally, they fall in love.
* ThePlace: Zelary, Joza's home town, where Eliska is sent on zero notice to live.
* LaResistance: Only in the opening scenes, in which Eliska attempts to deliver a letter for the Resistance only to nearly get arrested. The rest of the film has her living under false papers in the countryside, as a mill worker's wife.
* ShotgunWedding: An unusual spin on this trope. Eliska is forced to marry Joza immediately, not because she is pregnant, but because she needs a place to hide from the Gestapo, and there is no other way that the citizens of the village will accept her.
* TableSpace: The awkwardness between Joza and Eliska on their first night at home together is demonstrated when they sit in silence, on opposite sides of the stove.
* TemptingFate: As Richard and Slavek are drilling Eliska on security precautions on how to deliver her letter--wait for the sound of the vacuum cleaner, enter at 5:03 exactly--she does a mental eye-roll and says everything is perfectly safe. She tells them "It's getting boring, gentlemen." Then she arrives at the apartment building only to find the Gestapo already in it.
* ThereIsOnlyOneBed: There ''is'' only one bed in Joza's cottage, which is why he crawls into it on his and Eliska's second night together, explaining that the bench is uncomfortable. She clutches a pair of scissors under her pillow, but he stays on his side.
* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Eliska on her first night in Joza's cottage, as she changes for bed. Besides being fanservice it emphasizes her vulnerability, in a strange home with a man she doesn't know.

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