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Sjaj u očima Loving Glances: Srđan Karanović: Milena Dravić, Gorica Popović, Boris Komnenić: Drama: Skoro sasvim obična priča Almost Ordinary Story: Milica Zarić, Stefan Kapičić: Miloš Petričić: Comedy/Romance: Volim te najviše na svetu I think the world of you: Predrag Velinović: Ana Sofrenović, Tanja Bošković, Dragan ...
September 5 (read "September five") [4] is a 2024 historical drama thriller film directed, co-produced, and co-written by Tim Fehlbaum. Starring Peter Sarsgaard , John Magaro , Ben Chaplin , and Leonie Benesch , the film chronicles the Munich massacre of 1972 from the perspective of the ABC Sports crew and their coverage of the events.
Two of his films were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film: Three in 1966 [1] and I Even Met Happy Gypsies (Feather Gatherers) in 1967. [2] The latter (original title "Skupljaci perja") was the first movie that presented the existence of Gypsies in society and everyday life; it was also the first full-feature film where Gypsies spoke their own language, Roma.
The film bears no relation to reality. The film was remade after the lawsuit. In addition to demoting the prince to a captain, the date of the action was changed from 1905 to 1885, when the real prince was a young boy. Captain Danilo is sent by the King of an unnamed Balkan country to romance that country’s richest widow.
The Master and Margaret (Serbo-Croatian: Мајстор и Маргарита, Majstor i Margarita, Italian: Il maestro e Margherita) is a 1972 Italian-Yugoslav fantasy drama film directed by Aleksandar Petrović, loosely based on Mikhail Bulgakov's 1940 novel of the same name, although it mainly focuses on the parts of the novel set in 1920s Moscow.
The Faculty of Dramatic Arts (Serbian: Факултет драмских уметности, romanized: Fakultet dramskih umetnosti; abbreviated FDU) is a constituent institution of the University of Arts in Belgrade which focuses on education and research in the fields of film, theatre, dramaturgy, culture, radio, acting and medias.
The film is mystifyingly abrupt in its transitions, but its effects, physical and intellectual, are unmistakably forceful and chilling. The director, Aleksandar Petrovic, with the aid of a sparse script and stunning photography by Tomislav Pinter, has pointed up war’s ravages as it affects one partisan’s fights in one small sector of the ...
The film opens with a faux newsreel—presented as a sardonic allusion to the Yugoslav state-owned Filmske novosti [] news organization's tone and delivery—reporting on the 27 June 1971 opening ceremony of the Tunnel of Brotherhood and Unity near an unnamed village in the Goražde municipality in eastern SR Bosnia-Herzegovina, constituent unit of the Yugoslav Federation.