Objave
Cooperation of Sarajevo Film Festival and Doc Alliance
Are you a fan of documentaries? Do you want to be up to date with the latest documentary film achievements from South Eastern Europe? In cooperation with Doc Alliance we have prepared a selection of 11 short documentaries to watch for free for two entire weeks from August 4 to 17 at DAFilms.cz!
Croatian short documentary film is represented by two films with a marked political and critical subtext.REAL MAN´S FILM, the winner of the award for the best film dealing with human rights at the Sarajevo Film Festival, takes an uncompromising look at the relationship of humans and war conflicts, which in the case of South Eastern Europe, seems to be inseparable.
THE VERDICT also addresses the issue of war, while calling into question the role of war heroes and criminals using the example of an international trial with one of the Croatian generals, participants in the Operation Storm in 1995.
The problematic relations within the Balkan multicultural society are also one of the topics addressed by the cinematography of Bosnia and Herzegovina, producing three of the titles in our film selection. A DAY ON THE DRINA recounts the story of an unexpected discovery of the remains of Bosnian war victims.
The film BELIEVERS employs the theme of music to provide a vision of a heterogenic, yet equalitarian, Bosnian society. An artistic look at wild nature as a silent witness to the local turbulent history, is offered in the third documentary, ANYBODY, by Timur Makarević.
Three short films from Serbia focus on individual human destinies. WHEN I WAS A BOY, I WAS A GIRL follows the difficult transformation of the main protagonist into a female, all the more complicated due to the traditional environment of the Serbian countryside. MICA AND OTHER STORIES takes us on a journey to glory, together with a former pop diva from the united Yugoslavia, who strives to make a music comeback. On the other hand, the acclaimed documentary, OLD MOUNTAIN, portrays an opposite process – the fate of a village that is dying out and slowly vanishing from the map of Serbia.
Our special documentary selection wraps up with three solitaire representatives of Macedonian, Turkish and Slovenian cinematography. The short Turkish film, I’VE COME AND I’M GONE reveals the oriental magic of markets, under the baton of the unrelenting bids of market vendors. The Slovenian documentary, SCREENS, is the last in the line of political short documentaries. Together with the mothers of the victims, it returns to the place of the Srebrenica massacre and follows their personal pilgrimage filled with memories.