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Children's film: Number 55 (Broj 55) Kristijan Milić: Goran Bogdan, Alan Katić: War film [4] The Reaper (Kosac) Zvonimir Jurić: Ivo Gregurević, Mirjana Karanović: Drama [5] These Are the Rules (Takva su pravila) Ognjen Sviličić: Emir Hadžihafizbegović, Jasna Žalica, Hrvoje Vladisavljević: Drama: The Judgement (-) Stephan Komandarev ...
Due to different goals from the XBMC team, they forked the code that became Plex, and published it on GitHub. The OSXBMC code was kept roughly in sync with the upstream XBMC code. [7] In July 2008, the project was renamed Plex, which the developers said was chosen because "it evokes 'cineplex' and the suffix means 'comprising a number of parts ...
Mi nismo anđeli 2 We Are Not Angels 2: Srđan Dragojević: Nikola Kojo, Mirka Vasiljević, Goran Jevtić, Srđan Žika Todorović: Teenage comedy: Sequel to Mi nismo anđeli We Are Not Angels: Stvar srca Heart's Affair: Miroslav Aleksić: Vuk Kostić: Drama/Romance: Potraga za sreć(k)om: Milorad Milinković: Comedy: Zvezde ljubavi: Milan ...
Train in the Snow (Croatian: Vlak u snijegu) is a Croatian children and adventure film directed by Mate Relja.It was released on June 10, 1976. It is based on the children's novel Vlak u snijegu written by Mato Lovrak (1899–1974), then a young schoolteacher inspired by actual events, in 1933, and first titled Djeca Velikog Sela ("The Children of Veliko Selo").
Jadran Film is a film production studio and distribution company founded in 1946 in Zagreb, Croatia.In the period between the early 1960s and late 1980s Jadran Film was one of the biggest and most notable film studios in Central Europe, with some 145 international and around 120 Yugoslav productions filmed at the studio during those three decades, including two Oscar-winning films and Orson ...
Number 55 (Croatian: Broj 55) is a 2014 Croatian war film directed by Kristijan Milić, billed as "the first action movie" about the 1991–95 Croatian War of Independence. The film won eight Golden Arenas, including the Big Golden Arena for Best Film. The cast also includes Luka Peroš best known for his role of Marseille in Money Heist. [2]
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.
Partisan film (Serbo-Croatian: partizanski film / партизански филм) is the name for a subgenre of war films made in Yugoslavia during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. In the broadest sense, main characteristics of Partisan films are that they are set in Yugoslavia during World War II and have Yugoslav Partisans as protagonists, while ...