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Prague, housing estate, Black bridge, The Garden of Eden by socmod
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Prague, Lenin Street (now European), Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
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Prague, Czechoslovakia Color negative 1980s
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Charles bridge in Prague

Something from my sketchbook •ᴗ•
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Wenceslas Square from the roof, Libuše Jarcovjáková, 1978
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Peter Cech Photography 📷
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In Prague, the underground is a hall of victory over robots
Pražáci are the toughest people in Europe.
Their underground is lined with all the Daleks they killed.
See for yourself.

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by Negatives from the trash
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Prague (by Pavel’s Snapshots)
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"I'm human. I'm a human being!"
Jak utopit Dr. Mráčka aneb Konec vodníků v Čechách / How to Drown Dr. Mracek or The End of Water Spirits in Bohemia (1974) dir. by Václav Vorlíček.
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Praha, Národní divadlo Czechoslovakia Color negative 1980s
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A Report on the Party and Guests (Czech: O slavnosti a hostech, also known in English as The Party and the Guests) is a 1966 Czechoslovakian political satire film directed by Jan Němec. It was banned in Czechoslovakia from 1966 to 1968 for being an allegory of socialist regimes. After a short release during the Prague Spring, it was banned again, this time for twenty years. In 1974, director Jan Němec was forced to leave the country.
The film was entered in the 1968 Cannes Film Festival, but the festival was aborted owing to the events of May 1968 in France.
A Report on the Party and the Guests (1966) - Dir. Jan Němec
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Apartment blocks, Prague
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