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The series is an international co-production involving Cobra Film, Radio Television of Serbia, Skopje Film Studio, Iskra, Radio Televizija Republike Srpske, Macedonian Radio Television, and the North Macedonia Film Agency. The first season was received very well by audience and critics alike, some controversy notwithstanding.
Neka se ovaj film zove po meni: Sasvim licno: À propos de Sarajevo: 2005: Back to Bosnia: Sabina Vajraca: Dobro ustimani mrtvaci: Go West: Comedy drama: Heroji za jedan dan: Ljubav na granici: Lost and Found: Prva plata: Ram za sliku moje domovine: 2006: Brod ludaka: Grbavica: Jasmila Žbanić: Golden Bear - Berlin Film Festival 2006 Kako smo ...
Dvoboj za južnu prugu: Zdravko Velimirović: 1978 Boško Buha: Branko Bauer: 1978 Bravo maestro: Rajko Grlić: 1978 Sudbine: Predrag Golubović: 1978 Tren: Stole Janković: 1978 Okupacija u 26 slika: Lordan Zafranović: 1978 Paviljon VI: Lucian Pintilie: 1979 Partizanska eskadrila: Hajrudin Krvavac: 1979 Osvajanje slobode: Zdravko Šotra
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.
Time of the Gypsies (Serbo-Croatian: Дом за вешање, Dom za vešanje, lit. 'Home for Hanging') is a 1988 Yugoslav coming-of-age fantasy crime drama directed by Emir Kusturica . Filmed in Romani and Serbo-Croatian , Time of the Gypsies tells the story of a young Romani man with magical powers who is tricked into engaging in petty crime.
Most of the events the two main characters discuss in the play take place during the 1970's and 80's, and the earliest events described in the film take place in 1991. The entire subplot concerning the relationship between Luka's daughter and Teja is added in the film, in the play Luka has a son who is merely Teja's acquaintance.
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 ...
Doctor Homer's Brother (Serbo-Croatian: Brat doktora Homera, Serbian Cyrillic: Брат доктора Хомера) is a 1968 Yugoslav feature film written and directed by Živorad "Žika" Mitrović. [1]