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1-46 of 46
- A medical horror of corrupt gynecologists and true events from Croatian hospitals that will shock the public.
- When Marijana's dominant father falls seriously ill, she takes over the role as head of the family. The new power constellation also gives her new freedom that she has to find out a way to deal with.
- A comedy about two people with different world-views, from different places, whose fate, with the help from a bull Garonja (a name given to the black bulls in villages of Croatia), intertwine. Ante (Goran Bogdan) is a peasant from Dalmatian hinterland, a son of an bull fights organizer, and skilled insurance salesman. He is known by his powers of persuasion. At the voting for the Law for animal protection, biggest controversy is considering bull fights. Sonja (Judita Frankovic) is from Zagreb, an inveterate activist fighting for animal rights. In Dalmatian hinterland nobody can understand her attitude. They conclude that Sonja, regardless of the declared intense love of animals, would not dare stand in front of a bull. About Sonja and Anthony , the central pair who in his romantic comedy game going a little farther - a little back, a series of actions is carried out in the style of a wild untamed satire at the expense of local "yellow" media and important institutions such as the Croatian Parliament.
- When Slavko's old friend Djulaga dies, Slavko feels obliged to go to the funeral. But in his hometown of Mostar, in Bosnia & Herzegovina, this simple social obligation has the potential to get him into all kinds of trouble: with his neighbors or even with local political bigwigs. Yet if he does not go, his wife will think he's a coward, the grieving family will never forgive him - and he might have trouble forgiving himself. This is a compelling tale of everyday life in a fractured society, and a world where paranoia, comedy and drama co-exist. It is also an astute psychological portrait of a man who is forced to cross the invisible line that divides two communities. Above all, it is the story of a man who lost everything that defined him, when his country disintegrated.
- A Christmas tale with singing and poisoning
- "The wind got up in the night and took our plans away," reads the proverb in the opening titles of Museum of the Revolution. The words are a reference to the 1961 plan to build a grand museum in Belgrade as a tribute to Socialist Yugoslavia. It was supposed to "safeguard the truth" about the Yugoslav people. But the plan never got beyond the construction of the basement. The derelict building now tells a very different story from the one envisioned by the initiators 60 years ago. In the damp, pitch-dark building live the outcasts of a society reshaped by capitalism. The film focuses on a girl who earns a little cash on the street by cleaning car windows with her mother. The girl has a close friendship with an old woman who also lives in the basement. Against the background of a transforming city, the three women find refuge in each other.
- 27 years ago, a widower Stjepan Vokic found a stork with a broken wing. He saved her life and named her Malena. Since then, Malena has been living with Stjepan, sharing endless lonely winters and happy but short summers when Malena's faithful male stork returns to her. Without Stjepan Malena would certainly starve to death. And we ask ourselves, who would Stjepan be without Malena?
- Five yuppies go on a paint-ball session up in the hilly area of Zagorje where they soon lose contact to one another, but they've been discovered by a family of native villagers who make a home-made delicacy. They soon find out what are the ingredients of their hosts' recipe.
- Dragoslava has four TV sets, three grandchildren, two best friends, and a husband with whom she fights over a remote control. She keeps her private archive of memories of all major events in recent political history of five countries in which she has lived, without ever moving from her apartment. She is a trained poll monitor, passionate about her right to be in the minority, but more and more desperate as another early election approach.
- In a small village close to Orasje lives Marta Ivkic, a widow, mother of three children, one daughter and two sons. Out of former big family, the only one still living at Vidovice is Marta, a hard-working woman with cheerful spirit and moving voice. She nurtures the old customs, going to Mass at St. Vid's Church every day, socializing with her neighbors and very personally lives the life of Vidovice, the victims of the recent war, from Palm Sunday to Easter.
- Learn about domestic animals in a fun and interesting way.
- Ured(i) EU/The EU Office follows the lives of 5 students who are running the newly-founded EU Youth Office, where their job is to search for ideas on how to engage youth on EU values and policies. Which is easier said than done.
- Robert Knjaz representing the most important Croatian historical figures in a fun and educated way.
- Documentary portrait of father Zvonko Martic will remind us of the true meaning of command that tells us to "love thy neighbor as thyself", although they are different from you. His everyday actions and the way of living are the living proof of the very sense of that command.
- A micro-history of the City and a nostalgic tale about Dubrovnik's 'originals': bohemians, eccentrics and other one-of-a kind people. 'Originals' represent an image of Dubrovnik that can be seen correctly only by looking in the mirror, just like the word ECNALUBMA on emergency vehicles.
- The town of Jagnjedovac, close to Koprivnica, Croatia,hosts the event about the legend of Captain Ivan Vilima Galler and the secret love that the brave warrior has always linked to Podravina.
- Friends and colleagues talk about Niksa Fulgosi, an eccentric TV host from the 1970s.