Cinema of Yugoslavia |
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Lists of Yugoslav films |
1950s |
1960s |
1970s |
1980s |
1990–2003 |
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8103 big bend blvd, webster groves mo 63119 free parking in back. At The Calvert Journal, we have made a selection of the greatest avant-garde films from Eastern Europe, Russia, the Balkans, and Central Asia, now available to stream on MUBI. Touch Me Not Romania.
This is a film tour in the past that is still alive in people of the Balkans. A documentary about the birth, the rise and the crash of a national ideal. The unknown story of the Balkan wars 1912-13 depicted with unfamiliar archive footage, with stories told by witnesses and descendants of refugees and the analyses of Bulgarian, Greek and Turkish historians.
Time Of Violence (1988; 288 min.) is a MUST WATCH Bulgarian movie based on eyewitness written accounts. In the 17th century, a Bulgarian Christian region is selected by the Ottoman rulers to serve as an example of conversion to Islam. Balkan War movies. Release Calendar DVD & Blu-ray Releases Top Rated Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Showtimes & Tickets In Theaters Coming Soon Coming Soon Movie News India Movie Spotlight. Documentary (1) Romance (1) Western (1) Feature Film (11).
This is the list of films produced in Yugoslavia in the 1980s. For an alphabetical list of Yugoslav films see Category:Yugoslav films.
1980–1981[edit]
Title | Director | Cast | Genre | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | ||||||
Ko to tamo peva | Slobodan Šijan | Pavle Vujisić Dragan Nikolić Bata Stojković Boro Stjepanović | Comedy-drama | Won Special Jury Award at Montréal World Film Festival (1981) Voted as Best Yugoslav Movie of 1947–95 Period by members of the Yugoslavian Board of the Academy of Film Art and Science (AFUN) (1996). Screened at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival | ||
Special Treatment | Goran Paskaljević | Entered into the 1980 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
Days of Dreams | Vlatko Gilic | Entered into the 1980 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
See You in the Next War | Živojin Pavlović | Screened at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
1981 | ||||||
Do You Remember Dolly Bell? | Emir Kusturica | Slavko Štimac Slobodan Aligrudić Ljiljana Blagojević Mira Banjac | Drama |
| ||
Ritam zločina | Zoran Tadić | Ivica Vidović Fabijan Šovagović | Drama | Won International Fantasy Film Award for 'Best Actor' (Fabijan Šovagović) at the Fantasporto festival and 'Best Screenplay' | ||
Gosti iz galaksije Visitors from the Galaxy | Dušan Vukotić | Ljubisa Samardzic | Comedy/Science fiction | |||
Variola Vera | Goran Markovic | Rade Serbedzija | Horror | |||
The Melody Haunts My Memory | Rajko Grlić | Screened at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
Peacetime in Paris | Predrag Golubović | Entered into the 12th Moscow International Film Festival |
1982–1989[edit]
Title | Director | Cast | Genre | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | ||||||
The Marathon Family | Slobodan Šijan | Bogdan Diklić Danilo Stojković Pavle Vujisić Mija Aleksić | Comedy | Won Jury Prize at Montréal World Film Festival (1982)'Best Actress' award (Jelisaveta Sablić) at Pula Film Festival (1982) | ||
The Smell of Quinces | Mirza Idrizović | Entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival | ||||
1983 | ||||||
Balkan Express | Branko Baletić | Dragan Nikolić Bora Todorović Tanja Bošković Bata Živojinović Toma Zdravković | Comedy | |||
High Road to China | Brian G. Hutton | Tom Selleck | Adventure/Comedy | |||
Le Prix du Danger | Yves Boisset | Alexander D'Arcy | Science fiction | |||
Nesto izmedju | Srdjan Karanovic | Screened at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
1984 | ||||||
Balkanski špijun | Dušan Kovačević, Božidar Nikolić | Danilo Stojković Bora Todorović | Comedy | Won Golden Arena award at Pula Film Festival (1984)'Best Actor' (Danilo Stojković as Ilija Čvorović) at Pula Film Festival (1984) | ||
Davitelj protiv davitelja Strangler vs. Strangler | Slobodan Sijan | Taško Načić | Comedy/Horror | |||
Dediscina | Matjaž Klopčič | Screened at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
Nema problema | Mića Milošević | Lepa Brena | Music film | |||
Unseen Wonder | Živko Nikolić | Entered into the 14th Moscow International Film Festival | ||||
1985 | ||||||
When Father Was Away on Business | Emir Kusturica | Miki Manojlović Mirjana Karanović Mustafa Nadarević | Drama | Won Palme d'Or (Golden Palm) at Cannes Film Festival (1985)Nominated for Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film (1985)FIPRESCI Prize Cannes Film Festival (1985) | ||
Transylvania 6-5000 | Rudy De Luca | Jeff Goldblum | Comedy/Horror | |||
1986 | ||||||
Armour of God | Jackie Chan | Jackie Chan | Action/Adventure | |||
Lijepe zene prolaze kroz grad | Želimir Žilnik | Ljuba Tadić | Science fiction | |||
1987 | ||||||
Aenigma | Lucio Fulci | Jared Martin Lara Lamberti Ulli Reinthaler | Horror/Thriller | |||
Escape from Sobibor | Jack Gold | Alan Arkin | Drama/War | |||
Već viđeno Reflections | Goran Markovic | Anica Dobra | Horror | |||
The Harms Case | Slobodan D. Pesic | Screened at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival | ||||
Oktoberfest | Dragan Kresoja | Entered into the 15th Moscow International Film Festival | ||||
1988 | ||||||
Time of the Gypsies | Emir Kusturica | Davor Dujmović Bora Todorović Ljubica Adzovic | Drama | Won Best Director at Cannes Film Festival (1989) *Nominated for Palme d'Or (Golden Palm) at Cannes Film Festival (1989) Won Best Foreign Film at the Guldbagge Awards in Sweden (1991)Nominated for Best Foreign Film at César Awards in France (1990) | ||
The Way Steel Was Tempered | Želimir Žilnik | Entered into the 16th Moscow International Film Festival | ||||
1989 | ||||||
ALΩA-Praznik kurvi | Lordan Zafranović | Stevo Žigon Neda Arnerić Ranko Zidarić Dušica Žegarac | Erotic-drama | 'Best Actress' award (Neda Arnerić) at Pula Film Festival (1989) | ||
That Summer of White Roses | Rajko Grlić | Tom Conti, Rod Steiger, Susan George | Drama |
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
- Yugoslav film at the Internet Movie Database
The Balkan region, also known as Southeast Europe, is one of the most diverse in the world, taking in various different ethnicities, cultures and regions. Counting over ten countries and spanning from Slovenia to Western Romania, one can find a huge amount of interesting cinema that is worthy of your time. To celebrate the region, we have created a list of five films that we believe are essential viewing.
We have decided on a relatively broad definition of the Balkan region here, which allows us to celebrate the full brilliance on offer. Spanning from the films of former Yugoslavia to 90s Greece to modern-day Serbia, these films are filled with energy, satire, heartbreak and the changing of nations. Read on to see which films we picked. Disagree with what we choose? Feel free to sound off in the comments below!
The Wounds
Balkan Roundgraffiti Movies & Documentaries Ranked
Dedicated in the opening sequence to the “generations born after Tito”, The Wounds is a raucous satire of Serbian life following the break up of Yugoslavia. A remarkable anti-state movie made with state money during the unstable period of the 90s, The Wounds, inspired in part by Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas, could only have been made during that time.
It tells the story of Pinki, born the day Yugoslav president, Josip Broz Tito – who was generally regarded as a uniting leader – died. He is best friends with the Croatian Serb Å vaba: inspired by the Belgrade gangsters who were made media stars by Serbian television, they enter the world of crime together at the young age of 14. A devastating critique of the deadly Slobodan MiloÅ¡ević regime, The Wounds showed how some of the most violent people in the country can also be victims. Itwas a controversial shot in the arm for Serbian authorities, who refused to run adverts for it on state TV. Nonetheless it was a massive success and was even shown in bordering Croatia, although inexplicably with subtitles despite the fact that both languages are practically the same.
W.R. Mysteries of the Organism
Dušan Makavejev was one of the key figures in the development of Balkan cinema, one of the leading figures in the Black Wave movement of the 60s and 70s. His most famous film, which established him on the world stage, was W.R. Mysteries of the Organism. A strange satire that bizarrely links communism with sexuality, it is a unique mix of fiction and documentary that still startles to this day.
A true anti-authoritarian work, Makavejev’s film purports to be a documentary about Austrian analyst Wilhelm Reich, who believed that the orgasm could be a cure for disease. This is intercut with a love affair between a Yugoslavian woman and a Russian figure skater, creating something truly bizarre and anarchic in the process. Premiering at the Cannes Film Festival, it baffled many critics, although the likes of Roger Ebert quickly saw its unique character. The film was banned in Yugoslavia for sixteen years, with Makavejev sent into exile, only to return after the end of the regime. It would later prove a key inspiration on documentary and fiction hybrid forms.
Black Cat, White Cat
One cannot talk about Balkan cinema without mentioning at least one film by its most celebrated director, Emir Kusturica, the man behind films such as Underground, My Father Was Away on Business and Time of The Gypsies. For this list we have picked Black Cat, White Cat, a romantic black comedy that best showcases his penchant for chaos and magic realism.
Balkan Roundgraffiti Movies & Documentaries On Netflix
The story of Balkans is often the story of borders, as it is a region in Europe, unlike the EU, which doesn’t allow free and easy travel. In Kusturica’s film, action takes place upon the Danube River, with its Romani gypsy characters living on the Serbian border with Bulgaria. The hero is Matko Destanov, a smuggler who lives with his son in a self-built shack. When he has a new plan to get rich, he comes into contact with the gangster Grga Pitić, and many hijinks ensue, including a wedding scene that equals the very best of Federico Fellini.
Ulysses’ Gaze
Balkan Roundgraffiti Movies & Documentaries 2019
Greek filmmaker Theodoros Angelopolous made a variety of films that intersected Greek’s history with the wider region. Of particular note are the films he made in the 90s, entitled “The Trilogy of Borders” – with both The Suspending Step of the Stork and Eternity and a Day concerned with the border between Albania and Greece.
Ulysses’ Gaze, which was sandwiched in between these two films, might be the most interesting of the lot, starring Harvey Keitel as a Greek film director who returns to the region to participate in a screening of one of his films before starting an odyssey across Albania, North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia and Bosnia, all in search of three undeveloped films by the Manaki Brothers, the first films ever made in the region.
Balkan Roundgraffiti Movies & Documentaries 2017
It is told in Angelolopolous’ unique style, filled with long, enigmatic tracking shots and a quiet contemplative mood. The result is a fascinating exploration of myth and identity, surveying the ruin of the Balkans during the 90s in search of a new beginning.Â
Stitches
Miroslav Terzić’s Stitches is a slow and measured drama about a horrible reality in modern-day Serbia. Snezana Bogdanovic plays Ana, a quietly determined woman who still doesn’t know where her son was buried after she had given birth. When she realises that her son is not actually dead but was taken from her and given to another family, she sets off on an epic quest, fighting tirelessly against the labyrinthine difficulties of Belgrade bureaucracy.
Based on a real phenomenon in Serbia whereby over 500 families are still looking for their children, and not a single case has been closed, TerzÃc avoids didacticism through the use of simple repetition as well as the great humanity of Bogdanovic’s performance, which remains composed despite the endless difficulties she faces. As I wrote in my initial review – when it played last year at Berlinale – it is almost the perfect film.