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In Croatia's case the selection committee and procedure are organized by the Film Artists' Association of Croatia (Hrvatsko društvo filmskih djelatnika or HDFD). [7] Film producers and directors can submit a film for consideration to HDFD, which verifies the completeness of the application and compliance with Academy rules.
Novel and the movie are based on Gubina's (born 1981) experience of captivity in Serbian concentration camp for 260 days during Croatian War of Independence, from August 1, 1991, to April 16, 1992. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] During his imprisonment in the camp as a 10-year-old boy, Gubina was abused, forced to collect dead bodies and witnessed his ...
The following are lists of highest-grossing Greek films screened at cinemas in Greece and globally. The commercial course of Greek cinema has changed over time. The more successful periods are the period of 1950s and 1960s, often called the golden age of Greek cinema, and the recent 2000s.
72 Days (Serbo-Croatian: Sedamdeset i dva dana) is a 2010 Croatian-Serbian black comedy film directed by Danilo Šerbedžija and starring Rade Šerbedžija.The film was selected as the Croatian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, [1] [2] but it did not make the final shortlist.
The Road a Year Long (Italian: La strada lunga un anno, Serbo-Croatian: Cesta duga godinu dana) is a 1958 film directed by Giuseppe De Santis.A Yugoslavian-Italian co-production, it was Yugoslavia's first ever submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for the award at the 31st Academy Awards in April 1959. [1]
It had its first serious peak in the late 1950s, when Croatian film were possibly the most mature in the then-young Yugoslav film industry. The most important director of that era was Branko Bauer , a Dubrovnik -born director whose most famous film is the urban war thriller Ne okreći se, sine ( Don't Look Back My Son, 1956).
15 is a 2003 Singaporean coming-of-age black comedy-drama film about teenage gangsters in the Singapore suburbs. Directed by Royston Tan , the film is an expanded version of Tan's 2002 award-winning short film, also titled 15 .
Three Summer Days (Serbian: Tri letnja dana, Три летња дана) is a 1997 Serbian drama film directed by Mirjana Vukomanović. [1] The film deals with everyday life of Bosnian Serb refugees living and working in Serbia. [2]