Section: Feature Film Competition

Zvizdan

The High Sun

Dalibor Matanić
Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, 2015, 123 Min

A masterfully-narrated tale of three love affairs between a Serbian and Croatian covering the period 1991-2011. In the process, assisted by eye-catching imagery, the Croatian director manages to provide cinema audiences with an emotional understanding of the madness behind the civil war.

Cercamon

A masterfully-narrated tale of three love affairs between a Serbian and Croatian covering the period 1991-2011. In the process, assisted by eye-catching imagery, the Croatian director manages to provide cinema audiences with an emotional understanding of the madness behind the civil war.

A wonderful summer day in 1991; Jelena, a Serb, and her Croatian boyfriend Ivan swim without a care in the world. They intend it to be the last day they spend in this provincial backwater, for afterwards the plan is to escape and head to Zagreb. It is at this very moment that Serbian soldiers appear, turning erstwhile neighbours into deadly enemies as a long-accumulated sense of injustice is unleashed. The idyllic summer imagery with which Dalibor Matanić's anthology film starts out thus proves deceptive.

The second episode takes place in 2001. A mother and daughter, both Serbian, return to a destroyed village, where a young Croatian helps restore their damaged house. Though barely a word is spoken between him and the young Serbian woman, an impassioned sexual tension develops between the two that needs to find an outlet; that is, were it not for the reproach of the war dead that stands between them.

We then cut closer to the present day; though regardless of the fact that twenty years have passed since the outbreak of the war, a young student is still unable to admit to his parents that he loves a Serb, who's furthermore the mother of his child. Instead he decides to seek refuge in the city. In all three episodes the protagonists are played by Tihana Lazović and Goran Marković, both of whom are blessed with remarkable acting talents. At times playfully in love, at others imbued with hatred, they carry this emotionally complex film with absorbing passion. JT

Filmformat
DCP | Farbe / colour
Drehbuch
Dalibor Matanić
Kamera
Marko Brdar
Ton
Dora Filipović
Schnitt
Tomislav Pavlić
Musik
Alen Sinkaut, Nenad Sinkauz
Darsteller
Tihana Lazović, Goran Marković, Nives Ivanković, Dado Ćosić, Stipe Radoja, Trpimir Jurkić, Mira Banjac, Slavko Sobin, Lukrecija Tudor, Tara Rosandić, Ksenija Marinković
Produzent
Ankica Jurić Tilić
Produktion
Kinorama
Co-Produktion
Gustav film, SEE Film Pro
Kontakt
Cercamon
Sebastien Chesneau
Majara 1
903 Dubai Marina
P.O. BOX 113 222
Dubai
United Arabs Emirates
Tel.: +971.566.06.38 22
sebastien@cercamon.biz
www.cercamon.biz
Dalibor Matanić

Dalibor Matanić - – born 1975 in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (Croatia). He holds a degree in Film and Television Directing from the Academy of Dramatic Art in Zagreb. After shooting several short subjects, he made his award-winning feature debut Blagajnica hoce ici na more in 2000, based on his own screenplay.

Movies
STRETNO (1998, short, doc)
BAG (1999, short, doc)
TISINA (2000, short)
BLAGAJNICA HOCE ICI NA MORE (2000)
SUSA (2002, short)
100 MINUTA SLAVE (2004)
MAJKA ASFALTA (2010)
ĆAĆA (2011)
MAJSTORI (2013)

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