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Based on 31 reviews collected by the film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 45% of critics gave A Serbian Film a positive review, with an average rating of 5.2/10. The site's consensus reads: "A pointless shocker and societal allegory, a film whose imagery is so gruesome as to leave you scarred for life... or rolling your eyes for 100 minutes."
Dara of Jasenovac (Serbian: Дара из Јасеновца, romanized: Dara iz Jasenovca) is a 2021 Serbian historical drama film directed by Predrag Antonijević.Based on the testimonies of survivors, it deals with war crimes and atrocities that took place at Jasenovac concentration camp, [5] [6] which was a part of the Holocaust and the wider genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of ...
The Foreign Language Film Award Committee oversees the process and reviews all the submitted films. Following this, they vote via secret ballot to determine the five nominees for the award. [ 3 ] Below is a list of the films that have been submitted by Serbia and its predecessor states for review by the Academy for the award by year and the ...
The Wounds (Serbian: Ране, romanized: Rane) is a 1998 Serbian drama film written and directed by Srđan Dragojević.. It depicts the violent lives of two boys in Belgrade as they aspire to make names for themselves in the city's underworld.
The film received a positive review from Blic ' s Milan Vlajčić, who called it "an extraordinary moment for new Serbian film". In between praises for the whole cast, Vlajčić especially notices director and writer Uroš Stojanović, "whose debut showed maturity in stylistic composition of a comedy that contains patterns of quite a few genres ...
78 Days (Serbian: 78 dana) is a Serbian drama film, directed by Emilija Gašić and released in 2024. [1] The film centres on the coming of age of sisters Sonja (Milica Gicić), Dragana (Tamara Gajović) and Tijana (Viktorija Vasiljević) during the Kosovo War in 1999, whose relationship becomes disrupted when Sonja and Dragana find themselves rivals for the affections of Mladen (Pavle ...
The film won accolades for direction, acting, and brutally realistic portrayal of the war in former Yugoslavia. It was also the first Serbian film to show the Serbian side of the conflict involved in atrocities and ethnic cleansing – the title of the film is an ironic comment on the protagonists' activities in a Bosnian village.
Seven and a Half (Serbian: Sedam i po, Serbian Cyrillic: Седам и по) is a 2006 Serbian dark comedy film directed by Miroslav Momčilović. [1] Plot