Wild Flowers () is a Czech drama film released in 2000. It was directed by F. A. Brabec and based on seven of thirteen poems from Kytice, a collection of ballads by Karel JaromÃÂr Erben. While relatively successful commercially, the film was criticized for its crude literalism of depiction.
The film narrates seven stories inspired by Erben's poems, with most of the dialogue taken directly from his works and depicted visually as happening from spring to winter.
Serving as a prologue, Wild Flowers depict children mourning their deceased mother whose soul is suggested to have reincarnated into flowers covering her grave.
The Water Goblin depicts a maiden stolen from her mother by a water creature who makes her his bride underwater. After having a child together, the goblin allows the maiden to visit her mother, but makes her leave their child with him to secure her return. Despite her pleas, the mother forbids the maiden to return eventually, resulting in the goblin killing their baby out of anguish.
In The Spectre's Bride, a young woman is praying for her lover to return to her from war. To her surprise, the man does appear, prompting her to set out to his home in the middle of the night. The woman soon realizes her lover is undead as he drags her to a cemetery. Hiding in a chapel, the woman saves herself with prayers, withstanding the undead man's attacks until sunrise.
The Noonday Witch tells the story of a mother who, frustrated with her constantly crying and ill-behaved son, scares him by calling on a noonday witchâÂÂa monster who snatches childrenâÂÂto take him away. Much to her horror, the witch really appears. As the desperate mother tries to protect her child from being taken, she smothers him to death.
In The Golden Spinning Wheel, a young king falls in love with DorniÃÂka, a beautiful maiden, and asks her stepmother for her hand. On their way to the castle, DorniÃÂka's stepmother and stepsister murder and dismember the girl, and the stepsister poses as DorniÃÂka. An old wise man and his son find DorniÃÂka's remains in the forest and trick the women into giving them her limbs in exchange for a golden spinning wheel. The two then revive DorniÃÂka just as the king realizes his bride is not who she claims due to the spinning wheel singing the truth when being used. The king reunites with his love and the two women are ousted and killed by wolves in the forest.
The Daughter's Curse tells a story of a young woman who killed her baby born out of wedlock. When confronted by her mother just before being executed, the daughter curses her lover, and then her mother for giving her too much freedom which led her to grow up spoiled and selfish.
The last story, The Christmas Day, follows two girls, Hana and Marie, as they leave an old woman and their housework to venture out to a frozen lake, confident to see visions of the future in its icy waters. While Hana is excited to see a vision of her lover marrying her, Marie is horrified to see a funeral ceremony. At the same time, the old woman sits down for a prayer in a church, and dies.