Scene from Pepa (2018)
Scene Details
| Duration: 170 sec.. | Nudity: yes | Creator: supers992 |
| New Filesize: Loading... | Sound: yes | Old Filesize: 102 mb |
| File Format: AOMedia Video 1 (WebM/AV1) | Resolution: 1280x520 | Added: 2020-04-27 |
Actresses in this Scene
Details
Alternate Names: Alena Dolakova
Physical Characteristics: N/A
Career
First Appearances:
Most Important Roles:
Career Highlights:
Awards
Awards:
Full Biography
Alena portrayed the lead role of troubled dancer Marie in "Mirrors In the Dark" (2021) that opened at KVIFF. In this role, she excelled in three one-shot scenes that lasted 15 minutes and danced in all her scenes. She was also nominated for Czech Critic's Choice Awards. She worked with director Holy again on "Hello, Welcome" (2024) and "Chica Checa" (2025). Her breakout role was Holena in the Czech-Danish box office hit "Three Brothers" directed by two-time Academy Award winner Jan Sverak with whom she worked again on the movie "Bethlehem Light" (2022) and play "Good Morning With Finda" (2024). Alena gained MA at prestigious drama school JAMU and portrayed 10 leading parts in theaters in Prague and the UK. She lived in Los Angeles for two years after which she played an American in several projects. She was part of almost 40 film and TV projects, such as Knightfall (HBO), Whiskey Cavalier (ABC), Haunted (Netflix), Blood Red Sky (Netflix), Last Light (Netflix) playing a Brit, a Bulgarian etc. Miss Dolakova is also a published author (Anna of Hollywood, 2020, Albatros), activist and stand up comedian (two stand up specials with Lucie Machackova and Katerina Haskova).
About the Movie: Pepa (2018)
Production & Genre
Keywords
Keywords: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, character name as title, family relationships, husband wife relationship, man wears eyeglasses, manipulative woman, one word title, outcast, social outcast, younger version of character
Story
Pepa is a fifty-year-old civil servant living with his family in an ordinary district town. Pepa is somewhat henpecked, lacking respect even from his wife, let alone his daughter. Pepa knows that something has to change, and he even knows very well what that "something" is. But! The path to the goal is sometimes very thorny, and so we follow a series of more or less futile and tragicomic attempts by Pepa, the outsider hero, to finally start living his life. Will he manage to find answers to the questions "Why is he in the world? When does real life begin? After birth, after graduation, after first sex, after marriage or children? Or only after death?"
Summary
No plot/description found.