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The Master and Margaret (Serbo-Croatian: Мајстор и Маргарита, Majstor i Margarita, Italian: Il maestro e Margherita) is a 1972 Italian-Yugoslav 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.
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Typical "film noire" [1] plot of the film is not the main message of the film. The film is about fighting good against evil, and how criticism of government by Petrović reached another level as battle between good, in the character of mentally challenged Goca, and evil, in most of the characters in the film.
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.
Aleksandar Petrović (film director) (1929–1994), Serbian film director; Aleksandar Petrović (musician), a member of the Orthodox Celts; Aleksandar Petrović (priest) (1917–1944), Serbian Righteous Among the Nations; Saša Petrović (actor) (1962–2023), Bosnian actor; Alex Petrovic (born 1992), Canadian ice-hockey player
Aleksandar "Saša" Petrović was another of the major figures of the Black Wave. He contributed to the popularization of the movement, both in Yugoslavia and abroad. Two of his works were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film : Three (1965) in 1966 [ 15 ] [ 16 ] and I Even Met Happy Gypsies in 1967 .
Detroit Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams has been fined $19,697 by the NFL for "Unsportsmanlike Conduct (obscene gestures)" for his dive into the end zone last week against the Jacksonville ...
And Love Has Vanished (Serbian: Dvoje) is a 1961 Yugoslavian drama film directed by Aleksandar Petrović. It was entered into the 1962 Cannes Film Festival . [ 1 ]