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* Maui Film Festival 2003: Winner – Best Short Film; Audience Award – Best Newcomers{{Citation needed|date=July 2007}}
* Maui Film Festival 2003: Winner – Best Short Film; Audience Award – Best Newcomers{{Citation needed|date=July 2007}}
* Heartland Film Festival 2003: Winner – Crystal Heart Award{{Citation needed|date=July 2007}}
* Heartland Film Festival 2003: Winner – Crystal Heart Award{{Citation needed|date=July 2007}}
* Nominated for an [[Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film]].
* Nominated for the [[Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film]].


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 07:18, 21 June 2018

Most
Directed byBobby Garabedian
Written byBobby Garabedian
William Zabka
Produced byBobby Garabedian
William Zabka
StarringVladimír Javorský
Linda Rybova
Ladislav Ondrej
Ester Geislerová
Brad Heller
Klara Issova
CinematographyMichael FitzMaurice
Edited byKveto Hecko
Paul Petschek
Music byJohn Debney
Release date
2003
Running time
29 minutes
CountryCzech Republic

Most (re-titled The Bridge in some countries) is a 2003 Czech film directed by Bobby Garabedian and written and produced by Garabedian and American actor William Zabka. The music score was created by John Debney (The Passion of the Christ).

Plot

Most is the story of a single father who takes his eight-year-old son to work with him at the railroad drawbridge where he is the bridge tender. A day before, the boy meets a woman boarding a train, a drug abuser. At the bridge, the father goes into the engine room, and tells his son to stay at the edge of the nearby lake. A ship comes, and the bridge is lifted. Though it is supposed to arrive an hour later, the train happens to arrive. The son sees this, and tries to warn his father, who is currently not paying attention and is unaware of the oncoming train. Just as the oncoming train approaches, his son falls into the drawbridge gear works while attempting to lower the bridge, leaving the father with a horrific choice. The father then lowers the bridge, the gears crushing the boy. The people in the train are completely oblivious to the fact a boy died trying to save them, other than the drug addict woman, who happened to look out her train window. The movie ends, with the man wandering a new city, and meets a woman, holding a small baby. Other relevant narratives run in parallel, namely one of the female drug-addict, and they all meet at the climax of this tumultuous film.

Main cast

Awards

References

  1. ^ "Most | Archives | Sundance Institute". Retrieved 2 December 2013.