Minimum query is 3 letters.
ABOUT COMEBACK COMPANY
A production company based in New York, Comeback Company was founded by producer and independent film programmer Irena Kovarova.
IRENA KOVAROVA
 Having worked independently in New York in the field of repertory cinema since 2004, Irena founded Comeback Company in 2013 to further expand her film projects. Below is a selection of major film events that she has produced and/or curated.
Together with
Evgeny Gusyatinskiy, Irena Kovarova co-curated a nearly complete retrospective of the irreverant late filmmaker Jan Němec on the occassion of the international premiere of his final feature, as part of the International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2017.
JAN NĚMEC: MYSTIFYING THE REAL
Evgeny Gusyatinskiy & Irena Kovarova, February 2017
This programme was initiated two years ago. Back then, we were expecting Jan Němec’s new film to be completed. But not only the production of The Wolf from Royal Vineyard Street was prolonged, finishing only in 2016, this autobiographical work suddenly became Němec’s final film. He passed away four months before the film’s world premiere in Karlovy Vary. An unexpected, unbelievable turn of events – like another spontaneous cut for which his style is famous. [...]
Continue reading here.
The Jan Němec retrospective was organised in partnership with the Czech Film Center. Many thanks to Robert de Rek, Ilse van der Spoel, Iva Ruszeláková and Markéta Šantrochová for their enormous help.
An annual film festival of current European cinema held in New York, in three venues in its fifth edition—the IFC Center, the Bohemian National Hall, and Museum of the Moving Image. The number of organizing partners grew from eight in the first year to 34 in the fifth. Attendance more than doubled from the first year to the fifth, totaling over 1,500 admissions in 2013. (Curator/producer)
2013 Disappearing Act V
Screenings of 24 films with eight guests in three cinemas; expansion of the educational outreach program; and a panel discussion devoted to the streaming of European films in the U.S. (visit DAV Blog here for program details).
2012 Disappearing Act IV 
Screenings of 25 films with six guests, expansion to three cinemas; addition of an educational outreach program; and a panel discussion devoted to the presence of European cinema at universities in the U.S.
2011 Disappearing Act III
Screenings of 19 films with three guests and a panel discussion publicly launching the Subtitled Cinema Initiative.
2010 Disappearing Act II
Screenings of 18 films with one guest and a panel discussion on the distribution of foreign language films in the U.S.
2009 Disappearing Act: European Cinema from New Wave to New Wave 
Screenings of 18 films with three guests and a panel discussion on the access of foreign language films to cinemas in the U.S.
A touring series of recent Czech films screening in eight cities that was organized in collaboration with the Czech Film Center, Czech Center New York, and Czech diplomatic offices and premiered in New York at BAMcinématek; the touring program originated as an annual series that ran in New York beginning in 2000, also at BAMcinématek. (Curator/co-producer)
Irena Kovarova has produced tours of thematic and filmmaker retrospectives in art cinema venues around the U.S. and Canada, with varying level of curatorial participation: 
2012–2013 The second major North American film retrospective of Jan Švankmajer, presented in 16 venues
2011 The second major film retrospective of František Vláčil in North America, presented in five American venues
2009 The first complete film retrospective of Karel Vachek in North America, presented in six venues
2008 A historical survey/retrospective of Slovenian Cinema, co-curated with the Film Society of Lincoln Center and presented in four venues in North America
2008 A complete film retrospective of Miloš Forman, co-curated with the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the premiering venue, and presented in 13 cities, including as part of the Regis Dialogue program at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis
2006–2007 A thematic retrospective, Czech Modernism: 1926-1949, co-curated with BAMcinématek in New York, the premiering venue, and presented in five cities.
Since 2007, Irena Kovarova has been the executive producer of a globally touring retrospective with guest speakers titled Muppets™, Music & Magic: Jim Henson’s Legacy, organized by the Jim Henson Legacy foundation; the series has had nearly 60 bookings around North America and in Australia, Argentina, the UK, and Singapore.
In 2010, Irena curated and co-produced Cinema Belgrade, a series of current Serbian cinema in New York.
Since 2005, Irena has been a representative of the Czech Film Center in North America.
During her 1999–2004 tenure as deputy and acting director at the Czech Center New York, Irena organized and co-curated (*) the following film programs: four annual editions of New Czech Films at BAMcinématek; a tour of Gustav Machatý’s Erotikon with live music accompaniment in 2000; touring film retrospectives of Pavel Juráček*, František Vláčil*, Jan Švankmajer*, Karel Zeman*, and Věra Chytilová*; and the series Czech Horror & Fantasy on Film and Czech Animation (each retrospective screened in 5–12 venues in North America).
 
                                            
                            | JURAJ HERZ: IN AND OUT OF THE CZECHOSLOVAK NEW WAVE TOURING RETROSPECTIVE Starting August 2, 2019 | CURRENT | 
 
                                            
                            | THE PUPPET MASTER: THE COMPLETE JIŘÍ TRNKA TOURING RETROSPECTIVE Starting April 20, 2018 | PAST | 
 
                                            
                            | THE AMERICAN LANDSCAPE: THE FILMS OF KELLY REICHARDT TOURING RETROSPECTIVE premieres April 19, 2016 | PAST | 
 
                                            
                            | IN CASE OF NO EMERGENCY: THE FILMS OF RUBEN ÖSTLUND TOURING RETROSPECTIVE JANUARY–MARCH 2015 **** EXTENDED THROUGH APRIL 14 | PAST | 
 
                                            
                            | INDEPENDENT OF REALITY: THE FILMS OF JAN NĚMEC TOURING RETROSPECTIVE NOVEMBER 2013–APRIL 2014 | PAST | 
 THE JUNK SHOP (Sběrné surovosti, 1965)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A work of nonstop invention set over the course of a single day at a paper recycling facility frequented by oddballs, including manager and aesthete Bohoušek, based on Bohumil Hrabal's life and a story from his book Pearls of the Deep.
                                                                                    
                                                                    THE JUNK SHOP (Sběrné surovosti, 1965)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A work of nonstop invention set over the course of a single day at a paper recycling facility frequented by oddballs, including manager and aesthete Bohoušek, based on Bohumil Hrabal's life and a story from his book Pearls of the Deep.                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     SIGN OF CANCER (Znamení raka, 1966)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A warped detective story that begins with a murder in a hospital, the investigation of which reveals rampant incompetence, the film’s implicitly critical depiction of a public service sector overloaded with underqualified Party stooges would land Herz in trouble with censors for what was not to be the last time. New subtitles!
                                                                                    
                                                                    SIGN OF CANCER (Znamení raka, 1966)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A warped detective story that begins with a murder in a hospital, the investigation of which reveals rampant incompetence, the film’s implicitly critical depiction of a public service sector overloaded with underqualified Party stooges would land Herz in trouble with censors for what was not to be the last time. New subtitles!                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     THE CREMATOR (Spalovač mrtvol, 1969)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Herz's masterpiece, in a new digital restoration released by Janus Films in North America, is set in 1930s Prague, where Nazi ideology hangs as thick as the charnel fumes over the crematorium run by the troubled Karel Kopfrkingl. This macabre and harrowing work of psychological and social breakdown was banned after its 1969 debut only to re-emerge and garner deserved praise twenty years later.
                                                                                    
                                                                    THE CREMATOR (Spalovač mrtvol, 1969)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Herz's masterpiece, in a new digital restoration released by Janus Films in North America, is set in 1930s Prague, where Nazi ideology hangs as thick as the charnel fumes over the crematorium run by the troubled Karel Kopfrkingl. This macabre and harrowing work of psychological and social breakdown was banned after its 1969 debut only to re-emerge and garner deserved praise twenty years later.                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     OIL LAMPS (Petrolejové lampy, 1971)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Contender for the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1972, this early 20th Century period piece is set in a provincial town, Jilemnice, that’s riven by repressed desire and smoldering secrets. Herz plumbs deep within the psychology of his characters in this gripping and gorgeous film, which investigates the rot beneath the decoration and decorum of the Secession era. New subtitles!
                                                                                    
                                                                    OIL LAMPS (Petrolejové lampy, 1971)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Contender for the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1972, this early 20th Century period piece is set in a provincial town, Jilemnice, that’s riven by repressed desire and smoldering secrets. Herz plumbs deep within the psychology of his characters in this gripping and gorgeous film, which investigates the rot beneath the decoration and decorum of the Secession era. New subtitles!                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     MORGIANA (1972)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A Gothic drama about two sisters, Klára and Viktorie—both played by Iva Janžurová, in an amazing double-role performance—are put at loggerheads when the sweet, vapid Klára receives the better part of their father’s sprawling estate and the love of the man that Viktorie adores, leading the spurned sibling to venomous thoughts of murder.
                                                                                    
                                                                    MORGIANA (1972)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A Gothic drama about two sisters, Klára and Viktorie—both played by Iva Janžurová, in an amazing double-role performance—are put at loggerheads when the sweet, vapid Klára receives the better part of their father’s sprawling estate and the love of the man that Viktorie adores, leading the spurned sibling to venomous thoughts of murder.                 
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (Panna a netvor, 1978)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A tale you’ll know well—innocent girl presents herself as sacrifice to a cursed, freakish beast living in isolation, and learns to live with and love her captor—but turned into something very different in Herz’s morbid imagining. New subtitles!
                                                                                    
                                                                    BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (Panna a netvor, 1978)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A tale you’ll know well—innocent girl presents herself as sacrifice to a cursed, freakish beast living in isolation, and learns to live with and love her captor—but turned into something very different in Herz’s morbid imagining. New subtitles!                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     FERAT VAMPIRE (Upír z Feratu, 1981)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A satire on consumerism, a potent piece of anti-automobile propaganda, and perhaps the purest horror exercise that Herz produced. Starring the excellent Jiří Menzel (the Oscar winning film director) in the lead role of Dr. Marek. New subtitles!
                                                                                    
                                                                    FERAT VAMPIRE (Upír z Feratu, 1981)                                                             
            
            
                
                    A satire on consumerism, a potent piece of anti-automobile propaganda, and perhaps the purest horror exercise that Herz produced. Starring the excellent Jiří Menzel (the Oscar winning film director) in the lead role of Dr. Marek. New subtitles!                
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     CAUGHT BY NIGHT (Zastihla mě noc, 1985)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Conceived as a biography of Communist journalist Jožka Jabůrková, a victim of Ravensbrück, Herz went his own way, creating a nauseously stylized vision of hell on earth that is, with Wanda Jakubowska’s 1948 The Last Stage, one of only two fiction films made by a camp survivor about the experience.
                                                                                    
                                                                    CAUGHT BY NIGHT (Zastihla mě noc, 1985)                                                             
            
            
                
                    Conceived as a biography of Communist journalist Jožka Jabůrková, a victim of Ravensbrück, Herz went his own way, creating a nauseously stylized vision of hell on earth that is, with Wanda Jakubowska’s 1948 The Last Stage, one of only two fiction films made by a camp survivor about the experience.                 
            
            
     
                        
            
                                                     GOLDEN SIXTIES: JURAJ HERZ (Zlatá šedesátá, dir. Martin Šulík, 2009)                                                             
            
            
                
                    An illuminating portrait of Juraj Herz from a 27-part TV series about masters of the Czechoslovak New Wave.
                                                                                    
                                                                    GOLDEN SIXTIES: JURAJ HERZ (Zlatá šedesátá, dir. Martin Šulík, 2009)                                                             
            
            
                
                    An illuminating portrait of Juraj Herz from a 27-part TV series about masters of the Czechoslovak New Wave.                
            
            
     
            
COMEBACK COMPANY 
For press and booking inquiries:
To sign-up for our newsletter
email us with "newsletter" in the 
subject line:
Comeback Company 2014
Design by Parallel Practice
© All rights reserved.