Rudolf Adler
Directing
Known For

No description available.
Bakaláři
A father/son get-together trying, in their inept way, to do some repair work to their home that they have out in the country.
Boy's Vacation
No description available.
V hlavnà roli Oldřich Nový
This documentary-style story tells the story of an aspiring documentary filmmaker who is preparing a film about the history of glassmaking. He is honestly gathering information, slowly getting closer to an unknown and not always accessible environment, to people, whose actions he often doesn't understand because he misses their motivations... Shards for Eva is certainly not a skillfully wrought work, but it certainly impresses with its sense of at least partial capture of everyday reality.
Střepy pro Evu
A pensioner Petr ÄŚernĂ˝ runs an amateur internet TV and twice a week he broadcasts conspiracy and anti-immigration news. During seven years of his broadcasting he has become an important spokesperson of the part of the society. At the same time, Petr ÄŚernĂ˝ is also a proponent of cosmic mysticism and last but not least a generous person with deep human solidarity. Is it possible to understand a person who cosmically stays on top of things but at the same time refuses the changes that are happening in the current world, and not to make a fool out of him?
Good News
No description available.
Hrom do kapelnĂka
Eliška Junková, born in Olomouc, is among the first women in Czechoslovakia to earn a driving licence. After winning several European races, she competes in the famous Targa Florio in 1928, earning multiple awards. Following her husband's death at the Nürburgring, she ends her racing career, yet even in its brevity, joins Europe's elite. The portrait of Junková is made by the late director Rudolf Adler, a teacher of documentary filmmaking and author of the first textbooks on the subject, who headed FAMU's Department of Documentary Film from 1990 to 1994.
Why Not?

This documentary essay introduces a peculiar trio of men united by their passion for hunting. Each of them conceives of hunting in his own way, luring the viewer to an exotic safari, to an antlered trophy collection or to a sitting in the woods.
Long Live Hunting!
The film on a piece of speech in šalanda (1975) is a time-lapse feature documentary that he shot with the inhabitants of řihákov Mlyn in 1972.
Rudolf Adler: A Talk in the Mill
No description available.