Grbavica (2006) Poster

(2006)

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8/10
Rape Of Soul
Charles_LePoje11 January 2007
'Grbavica' is yet another superlative film coming from Bosnia. Firmly walking in the footsteps of Bosnian Best Foreign Language Film winner 'No Man's Land', the film trails a promising future for the fledging Bosnian film industry. This small, understated production is the proof-positive of the vibrancy of the Eastern European Cinema. A pioneering feature effort by the writer/director Jasmila Zbanic, the film has already been accoladed the prestigious Golden Bear at this year's Berlin International Film Festival and is sure to be a strong contender when it hits International festival circuit.

Ms Zbanic has created a quiet, sentimental and feminine picture of the war's aftermath and the emotional toll the war inflicts on a mother/daughter relationship. She assuredly, with a hand of a born film-maker, creates a small but potent film which is a startling reminder of cinema's transcendental powers.

'Grbavica' is sure to snuggle in the same underrated niche of anti-war movies that deal with lasting trauma on the psyche of war survivors. Movies like Hal Ashby's unforgettable 'Coming Home' or Russian 1959's classic 'Balad of a Soldier'.

The picture's lasting impact owes much to the haunting performance of Mirjana Karanovic, a consummate artist who has, for over a decade, been the most decorated and awarded actress coming from war-torn former Yugoslavia. In Esma, Mirjana has entered the body and soul of a tormented war victim with a dark secret, and thus given us yet another performance to talk about. Her daughter Sara is expertly played by the little Luna Mijovic in a film debut reminiscent of Natalie Portman's career-launching role in Luc Besson's 'The Professional'.

Variety's Russell Edwards pinpointed film's main shortcoming: '...the film is all set up and little pay off'. Indeed, although well-rounded and balanced, 'Grbavica' lacks complexity and dramatic density. A story thread is missing, a counterpoint of sorts, that would have enriched its thematic appeal and elevated its dramatic tension.

Even the best of war movies, intentionally or not, on some level or another could be seen as one-sided and propagandist. It took more than a hundred years of cinema for a film-maker to come along who realized this inherent danger in making war movies. 'Flags Of Our Fathers' is a solid war movie with a strong anti-war message. But who could blame some Japanese for seeing it as anti-Japanese. That's why the old man Clint, creating cinematic history, has given us 'Letters of Iwo Jima', the version of the same battle seen through the Japanese point-of-view.

Unspeakable atrocities are committed in any war. It would be idealistic if not idiotic to expect that a humane war could ever be waged. Both sides commit them, the stronger always more than the weaker. Had Ms. Zbanic weaved a story thread that would have touched upon this unfortunate reality, her subtle and soulful feature debut would have radiated universality of a true masterpiece.
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8/10
plain-clothes suffering
altyn8 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The film looks so simple, and maybe it is somewhat too simple in cinematographic terms, but the story is very carefully built (and faultlessly acted). Just remark how symmetric are the paths of Esma and Pelda in the film: war has left her with a difficult daughter, him with a psychically suffering mother. It is moving just because the heroine (almost) always manages to stay dignified and hide her real feelings from unsympathetic people, and the spectator is engrossed by her slow and difficult acceptance of the need for crying out. I found especially credible Sara and her boyfriend, who show a perfect blend of childishness and pseudo-adult behaviour (when they are alone in Esma's flat they drink wine AND play puzzle). The story is brought by the director to the brink of tragedy and Esma might well end badly at one point or two, but then the plot gently turns a bit and there is no more tragedy that what has already happened during the war and which we sense, rather than see, through Esma's own reactions at scenes recalling her of those times. And the spectator is led to feel with her.
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8/10
Heartbreaking
claudio_carvalho24 August 2009
In Grbavica, Sarajevo, Esma Halilovic (Mirjana Karanovic) raises her teenage daughter Sara (Luna Mijovic) alone with many difficulties and working in double-shift. Every now and then Esma participates in a group therapy with other traumatized Bosnian women that have survived to the Balkan War. Esma needs two hundred Euros for the school trip of Sara and is working hard to raise the amount. When Sara is informed by her teacher that the martyr certificate of her father would grant her to travel for free, she presses her mother to give the document. But Esma borrows the money and pays the full price and Sara forces her mother to disclose the truth about her father.

"Grbavica" is a heartbreaking movie about the violence against women in the Balkan War. The touching and credible story is very simple but discloses in a very delicate way through the relationship of a mother abused in a women's camp and her spoiled and rebel teenage daughter. The performance of Mirjana Karanovic and the direction of Jasmila Zbanic are awesome and the result of their work will certainly bring tears to sensitive viewers. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Em Segredo" ("In Secret")
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Touching and raw
Gordon-112 April 2007
This film is about a woman who has to raise money for her daughter's school trip. Or she could produce a certificate to say that her daughter's father is a war hero, so that her daughter could go to the trip for free.

The film is down to earth and realistic. There are no grand sets, no expensive costumes and no fancy cars. Instead, we get to see a real side of life in Sarajevo. A bus ride, working in factories, picnic on the hilltop or women trying dresses on: all of these seemingly trivial matters reflect how people live. It brings out the soul of the characters, and we get to care for them.

The daughter, Sara's youthful rebellion is direct and raw. Her spectrum of emotions, from sadness to joy, on the final bus ride is remarkable. Esma's work in the night club is also memorable. Her shock and disgust with things that go on around her, and her self pity that she has to earn money like that is striking.

Esma's final confession in the group is touching and emotional. It crystallises anger, hate, despair, ambivalence and love into one. From the interaction between Esma and Sara throughout the film, who would have thought that Sara was in fact born in such circumstances?

This film is touching, not only because it exposes the scars of post war Bosnia, but also the everyday tragedies of the lower class.
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6/10
Single mother faces the demons from her past while her daughter slowly comes of age
Horst_In_Translation23 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
"Grbavica", which is also known as "The Land of My Dreams" and "Esma's Secret" is a co-production between a total of four countries with Bosnia and Herzergovina being the most dominant from the bunch. The film is also, according to imdb, exclusively in the Bosnian language. It runs for pretty much exactly 1.5 hours, which means it is not a long movie by any means. The writer and director is Jasmila Zbanic and she was not a rookie when she shot this film and worked for example on documentaries before, but this was her first "real" big screen project with actors, so surely also a breakthrough project, especially if you take a look at the awards recognition it received. A lot there came from the Berlin Film Festival where the movie had its world premiere apparently and won really big. Three awards is nothing that happens all the time. That much is safe. Impressive feat and those were no consolation prizes either because this trio of trophies also included the Golden Bear, so the most crucial trophy that is awarded there. Gigantic success for Zbanic and nobody can be surprised that she is still a successful filmmaker nowadays over 1.5 decades later as this film is from 2006. It was shown on the big screen again today for a large group of students, so it was a one-time showing only, and I was lucky enough to sneak in with a ticket as well. I do not regret going one bit. The film is worth being seen, not necessarily on the big screen, but also if it is shown on the small screen, I advise you to take the chance and I am sure you will also not be disappointed by the outcome here, even if I would not call it a must-see either. But it is infinitely better than the film that Zbanic had a lot of success with very recently, a film that made much bigger waves even as it was nominated for two BAFTAs and dominated (that even rhymes) the European Film Awards. I will not give you the name as you can check that out for yourself, but I thought that film was really bad at times and criminally overrated and I did not see a lot of artistic impact to it, especially not in terms of writing and the lead actress. But that is another story, another review.

Now let us talk about this movie we have here instead: It was Bosnia's submission to the Oscars only five years after the country won this perhaps biggest award for any international movie, but it did not manage the Oscar nomination. A bit of a pity as I would have been fine with the film getting nominated and I would have imagined the subject also could have been really up the Academy's alley, but maybe I am thinking more of today than back then. The film would probably have better chances nowadays. Zbanic was only around the age of 30 when she made this and her lead actress Mirjana Karanovic was almost 20 years older, namely slightly under 50. I see that she has acted in over 100 projects by now, so very prolific actress to this day. She plays Esma whose name you can read in the alternate title. The co-lead or biggest supporting actress (something in-between) is Luna Zimic Mijovic and sometimes the "Zimic" is left out with her name. She is around the age of 30 now, so you can see she was really quite young there. This was her very first film overall and she also did not give up on acting it seems, but keeps going even if her most recent project is now already from two years ago. Actually, this was not the first time I saw Zimic Mijovic in something, but she played in quite a few German projects even over the years and there I have seen a lot, so also come across her here and there. I think she is not only pretty, but also talented. She surely proves it with this movie and in the end she is also ready to make certain sacrifices if the script requires her to. Well done! I mean that is stuff that to some extent won Anne Hathaway an Oscar, but let's not exaggerate. I hope we will see LZM for many years, if not decades, to come in movies, no matter if we are talking German/Austrian films or international movies, maybe from Eastern Europe like this one here. With the more obvious supporting characters I cannot really say too much. Most of them are male and I am not familiar with the actors, at least not knowingly that I remember their names or remember having seen them in other releases. But they all did a decent job and I think the acting was maybe the film's biggest strength, with Karanovic, but also at least as much with everybody else here.

The script was fine too, but I think you could see here already that escalating the plot is not really Zbanic's biggest strength in terms of writing. You could witness that painfully during her most recent work I talked about earlier, but here it is also visible already. Two key escalations here come out of pretty much nowhere and did not feel well-crafted. One would be the gunpoint scene and honestly before that it always seemed far more important to her to be allowed on the trip with her fellow students than really to find out in detail about her dad. The cutting-hair twist also felt a bit abrupt, but this I did not mean with the second escalation. Said second escalation (or in terms of chronology the first in fact) was when the protagonist is attacked by her boss and the other two come to help her and knock the boss down. This also came out of nowhere. I mean it still made a bit of sense because he was so mad that he did not get the money, but still. Also, if it meant so much to him (plus it was really not a huge sum), then I wonder why he let her make the pick in the first place. That way it was basically a lottery because she knew absolutely nothing about football. Or soccer I should say maybe for the American readers. Still, the anti-betting message is not a surprise, also the irony that he is so mad when without her, he perhaps would not have won anything.

The secret mentioned in the alternate title I liked more. In terms of what is revealed here. I was not as touched as the young woman sitting next to me crying, but I think if we look back with the knowledge of what happened to her, then we think differently of the bus scene in which she is uncomfortable with the guy very close to her or that she is not really playing hard to get with her potential love interest up there when he tries to kiss her, but she really has to build relationships with men from the scratch. All this makes it maybe also a good film for a rewatch. There you will maybe also have a completely different take on the scene when she is in this group with other women who went through similar mayhem as we can guess in the end and now we know about the purpose of this group and what she is doing there and why the instructor says that nobody is forced to talk if they don't want to. And we realize the laughing woman maybe lost her sanity and the other woman who talked a lot found her way to deal with things and the other one who asks for a job to make more money was really hardened apparently from what happened to her, but a similar thing can be said about the main character. She tried to ban it all out of her life, the terrible things that happened back then, but the confrontation with her daughter brought it all back and she finally managed to process the past in a way that she talked about these things in front of the others inside the group. There you see the full gravity from the story here. I mean it was not a light film either before that and there were no scenes where you would laugh with one exception for me maybe, namely when the mother finds out that the daughter told her teacher that the mother is sick, so the teacher would not talk to the mother.

All this was in a way stuff that every child did or at least tried at some point, so the girl's struggles here are not as severe as her mother's, at least not before the revelation that changes everything. It is just normal issues like how the kid is unhappy with her babysitter or how she wants to go on a trip with her class, but we cannot be sure if there is enough money. Interesting though that the children of parents where the man died in battle get a special permission to join everybody without having to pay and there was another inclusion where some children would not have to pay the full price. From a very basic perspective, you could say that this is also a romance film as mother and daughter are meeting men/boys courting them at the same time. With the girl, it was a bit of a violent first meeting there, one that still united them because of their fathers. Or what the girl thought happened to her father. I am getting to the end of my review now and overall I surely want to praise this film. The positive recommendation and thumbs-up was never in doubt. During the watch I felt that this was a good movie where the watch was closer to "great" than to "weak" without a doubt and I am still thinking the same now. Still, I also came to thinking that if you really evaluate some of the inclusions here in terms of the script, then you will find flaws with this film and it is not just minimal flaws (like for example we knew there would be some escalation with the gun coming, but the one they went for was not the best they could have chosen or executed), so I cannot give it a really enthusiastic overall recommendation. Still, as I stated at the start already, I am glad I went to see this and I think that if you have a chance to catch this on television (chances for it to be shown on the big screen again are really small), then go for it and I am positive you will also enjoy the watch, even if "enjoy" is maybe not the right word here given the plot. Finally I want to say, to end with something positive, that I liked the ending. It was a happy one with the girl being inside the bus on her way to the school trip and the mother(s) waving outside. When we see her sing with the others, it was a good moment for the closing credits to roll in and the song we hear there I also liked. So yeah, go see this film. I give it a thumbs-up.
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9/10
An Oscar-worthy performance and a beautiful film
tclark-51 August 2006
I was fortunate enough to see this wonderful film at the Melbourne International Film Festival where it seemed to receive a positive reaction from the large audience.

Jasmila Zbanic has written and directed a film that is powerful enough to speak to a global audience. Even as a twenty-something Australian male, I was able to relate to the struggle of a middle-aged Bosnian woman because of the strength of Zbanic's storytelling and the superb acting.

I was particularly astonished by Mirjana Karanovic's performance and would be thrilled to see her acknowledged at Oscar time next year. She captured Esma's internal conflicts perfectly and brought many audience members to tears. Luna Mijovic was also very good as Sara, shifting with ease between adolescent rage and childlike vulnerability.

Zbanic should be applauded for crafting a film that reminds us that the wounds of war leave deep scars. While Zbanic's script may not be "perfect", the humanity of her message is strong enough to leave us feeling grateful for the gift of love. At a time when the global political climate is in such tumult, films like this remind us to appreciate the loving relationships we have, despite the baggage they may come with.
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6/10
A Bosnian woman once raped by Serbian soldiers and making her daughter born as a result of this accident believe that her father was a "shakheed".
khomiakovajo12 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
A very touching story full of really exact details of daily routine in Sarajevo nowadays and a very typical atmosphere of a family without men just can't leave you indifferent whether you believe or not that Bosnian war was an inner affair of the former Yugoslavia without any Western participation, etc. The countries after wars or revolutions are full of women who can't re-start their private lives broken by some shock. The last scene in which the protagonist's daughter Sara (definitely named after Sarajevo!) together with her classmates sings a patriotic song dedicated to the capital of Bosnia makes recall Leo Tolstoy's "Patriotism is the last shelter of bastards" - well, I don't think so, yet patriotism may be really the last shelter of unhappy people. With all this very few people in the audience can notice that the protagonist Esma played by Kusturica's actress Mirijana Karanovic is a little bit too old for this role. Esma (as she recalls her student's years before the Bosnian war) should be not about 50 but about 34-35, if not of the same age as the film director Jasmila Zbanic, and she can't say jokingly "I swear by Tito!" since that generation didn't feel the "Titoism" that much (Esma should be about 6-7 years old when Tito died). Jasmila Zbanic and her European producers could hardly notice it but ... can they count??? Helas, being exact is like being responsible which is getting rare in our civilization. All the rest social and historic details known only to Yugoslavians are beyond my own knowledge. Well, can the spectators count, especially if they are members of jury in Berlinale?!
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10/10
Excellent Movie
mersad1820 February 2006
This Movie is excellent, and it's starting in cinemas around Bosnia and Herzegovina March 1st.

GRBAVICA is a story about contemporary Sarajevo…

Single mother Esma wants to grant her twelve-year-old daughter Sara's wish to participate in a school trip. A certificate proving her father is a war martyr would allow her a discount. But Esma continues to avoid Sara's requests for the certificate. She would rather find a way to pay full price for the trip. She believes not telling the truth about Sara's father is a way to protect both her and her daughter.

It's moving and touching, but also very truthful to the post-war events. I hope it will hit cinemas worldwide or at least a DVD Realise. Grbavica's director won 1st Prize on the Berlin Movie Festival.
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7/10
After the war
paul2001sw-113 September 2008
'Esma's Secret' is a film set in the European ordinariness of Sarejevo; but the bullet holes still visible in the city's plasterwork are a chilling reminder of the terrible conflict the erupted here in the early 1990s, fuelled by politicians trading on notions of supposed racial identity. The film explores the nature of life where many live with their own memories of war; it's a sensitive movie, although a somewhat obvious one (nothing here contradicts the "official" verdict that the Bosnians were the victims of the Serbs, something which may well be true in general, but a more interesting film might have probed the exceptions). What I enjoyed most was the convincing performance by Luna Mijovic as the teenage daughter of the central character Esma, full of rebelliousness and incipient sexuality. It's also nice to see a movie where the actors look like real people, not film stars.
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10/10
plain simple and heartbreaking
todorovic21 February 2006
Very simply a honest, straightforward and earnest film about a topic that is just so important to be informed about and discussed.

The camera-work is so to the point, so is every little piece of direction. The acting is sharp, clear and real all the way through. - I was hoping for Mirjana Karanovic (as well as Luna Mijovic) to win the Bear for their incredibly focused performances. Well, they didn't get it, shame, I thought, but then again, a golden bear for best film is not so bad either...! So congratulations to Jasmila and the whole team and the four different producers from four countries making this possible in joint effort! -

And given all these plain and clear ingredients, what you end up with is one of the most moving "movies" I have seen for a very long time.

This film is not about reinventing the wheel, it is simply all about showing how incredibly well a well made wheel can work.
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7/10
Jasmila Zbanic arrives with an emotional belter in her debut feature
movedout6 May 2007
Winning the Golden Bear at the 2006 Berlin International Film Festival, Bosnian writer-director Jasmila Zbanic arrives with an emotional belter in her debut feature, "Grbavica". All the more relevant now in its quietly disconcerting post-wartime musings, the film packs all the wallop of a shotgun to the gut with the revelations sowed from the secrets held between a mother-daughter pairing of waitress, Esma (Mirjana Karanovic) and her pubescent daughter Sara (Luna Mijovic). Sara, a wartime baby, believes her father to be a hero for the cause and a monetary benefit that derives from that belief spurs her inquisitive nature that begins to unsettle Esma. Alluding to bankrupt masculine values in the region among other things, the film's raison d'etre is to remind audiences of the echoes of war and the numerous communal crises still facing its people. "Grbavica" falters when it shows too much leg and too little narrative flexibility when leading up to its devastating conclusion, marvelously acted upon by its leading ladies.
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10/10
excellent movie!
kors200312 March 2006
i have seen GRBAVICA at the berlinale in Germany and this is one of the best movies i ever seen. without any violent scenes this pictures burns the whole frightening war in former Yugoslavia in your head - without to accuse somebody directly. it is a film about accomplishment of the war, the state of the country now, the relationship between mother and daughter, the puberty and a love story too. very good actors and calmly produced. very earned won the golden bear in berlin! if you have the chance to see this movie, please use it... hopefully this movie will be internationally known, not only in Europe.

(excuse, my English is not so good)
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6/10
Bosnia.
yusufpiskin14 March 2020
A heartfelt look at the real, often invisible and neglected consequences of war in lives of every day people, when all the macho posturing and political spectacle is over - broken lives, scarred bodies and "impure" histories tearing people apart not only in relation to each other but also within themselves. A subtly brutal and slow-burning, yet at the same time gently powerful film, reminding us how futile, shameful, stupid, and ultimately violent the imposition of "universal" historical memory is to people who just did not have a choice.
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1/10
Atrocious
richkiel9 December 2021
This film has nothing to do with the reality of war and is nothing but a bizarre attempt at indulging in victim mentality. It comes across as laughable for those of us who are familiar with the history of the conflict in question.
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10/10
A Land Of Dreams, Or Nightmares?
Seamus282925 May 2007
This little film drew me in with it's central characters, a Mother who was a war survivor,who had been in the P.O.W. camps in Sarajevo (played to perfection by Mirjana Karanovic), and her daily struggle to keep her head above water, with a thankless job in a cocktail bar, and with the daily battle with her adolescent daughter, Sara (played by Luna Mijovic). The two women share a love/hate relationship that will easily tear at your heart at times. This is not always an easy film to watch, but is an easy film to appreciate. First time writer/director Jasmila Zbanic works well with the cast,drawing just enough emotion to make this a heartbreaking, but satisfying experience.
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10/10
A story that had to be told
momisan29 July 2006
Highly recommended.

Sarajevo is a raped city, Bosnia is a raped country and the culprit, although known, has never been convicted. How a person, and a nation, finds a strength to overcome the injustice? Very difficult, sometimes impossible.

I hoped and prayed that Sarajevo has that strength, and still do, however, this movie showed me how heavy the burden is. It is personal, a message to each one of the viewers to try to put themselves in victim's shoes and see how they would cope. Hard core stuff. The film tries to put on a positive spin at the end, however, it wasn't that convincing, I am afraid.

Mira Karanovic is absolutely stunning!
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10/10
Wonderful film
aiculik30 March 2007
Before yesterday, I didn't know ANYTHING about Bosnian actors or directors. I only went to see it because of Leon Lucev - I know him from Sta je muskarac bez brkova. Well, I discovered Jasmila Zbanic, Mirjana Karanovic, Luna Mijovic yesterday. Both actresses were brilliant. The director managed to show normal life of Sarajevo, it was so easy to identify with Esma and Sara's problems, even for people who never had such traumatic experience.

That's why the ending was even more shocking. I had tears in my eyes (and that happens very rarely, I'm not sentimental at all) - and when I secretly looked around, I saw all the others have tears in their eyes, too.

One little off-topic comment: I saw here comment that Esma shouldn't swear to Tito in the film, because she was too young when Tito died, and her generation didn't feel Titoism so strong. I was only 3 when Tito died. But even 8 years AFTER he died, we (in Croatia) still had to sing "Comrade Tito, we swear to you not to turn off your path" and "Comrade Tito, white violet, all young people love you. Young and old love you, you are our pride and our hope" - we had to sing it on all school events on holidays.
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9/10
Grbavica - the land of conflicting emotions and eternal struggles
Mancic20006 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This is a truly sad but beautiful masterpiece. We have heard so much about wars and atrocities that go with it. What about people who still have to live with all the nightmares and aftermaths of the atrocities on their own land, which they had once loved in an unrestrained and uninhibited manner but is now tainted with horror and sins? What have they done to deserve a life like this and what actually keeps them going but not giving up? Zbanic gives us the answer - it is love, the love of your family, the love of your home, despite it being a kind of contaminated, qualified and conflicting love which is eternally tainted with gruesome memories and haunting flashbacks. The nationalistic song sung by the students and in the end, an unsettled Sara, on the bus sums up this theme neatly and concisely.

A very genuine and down-to-earth movie which speaks so much for itself and for the victims of war crimes who are and will still be living in a war of their own emotions for the rest of their lives. Besides, the direction is simplistic with a classy emotional twist powerfully built up to the climax of the scene of Esma's confession. The ending scene is a lifetime unforgettable. No words, just a song but it sums up what Sara has to feel and say perfectly. The acting is superb, expectedly from the veteran Karanovic and pleasantly surprisingly from the teenage Luna Mijovic.

It is worth in the least Oscar nominations for the best director and the best foreign film . Go and watch it!
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5/10
a decent movie
dragokin19 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In this movie you'll find a story that could probably be told about any country that has been through a war in the past twenty years. This particular one has been set in Bosnia and shows people coping with post-war recovery. The main characters are what would be a description of any society that went through such an ordeal:

Civilians (that probably went through biggest hardship of them all); Former soldiers; Pre-war criminals turned war heroes turned post-war entrepreneurs; Children growing up with hearsay about life during wartime.

If you abstract that the characters are or have been on one of the sides, and in Bosnia there have been at least the official three, it definitely is a universal story.

What spoils the impression is probably invisible to the average viewer, since it happened during the promotional campaign surrounding the movie. The author used it to point out how one of the sides was "more guilty" than others for conflict and outcome of the war in ex-Yugoslavia. This is probably where you may argue whether contemporary art is relevant when not used for social activism, yet the author misses the mark and succeeds only in finding funding for future projects by like-minded people.
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9/10
reflects upon hopes, evokes strong emotions.
mangorytm110 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Almost every scene depicting the life of Esma and her 12- year old daughter, Sara carefully shows human emotions. Grbavica is an intensely gripping drama about discovering the truth. The story is set in former Yugoslavia; Zbanic doesn't simplify post-Balkan war Sarajevo. The landscape is marked by war; Sara and her boyfriend spend their time in demolished and abandoned buildings. War trauma intertwines with everyday life. Esma and a bodyguard she befriends, discover they have met at exhumations, and both share the experience of loosing their loved ones. Esma works the night shift as a waitress in a night club run by a gangster, she is intent on giving her daughter what she can. It's clear that she is struggling to earn money for her daughters' school trip, but I wasn't so sure about the idea that a woman with such a past would work in the specific environment of gangsters and prostitutes. Since Esma doesn't confront her problems the chasm between mother and daughter widens. The government ensures psychotherapy and welfare for women imprisoned Chetniks. I found the therapy scenes lacked psychological probability; it's hard to believe in sessions with such a number of women, and a seemingly incompetent and slightly short on empathy psychologist. Esma comes to terms with her own past, not because of the meeting, but thanks to Sara. When finally, she reveals the long concealed truth. When Sara discovers she is not the child of a war hero, she loses her illusions, but gains inner strength. Luna Mijowic was moving in her portrayal of Sara, a child at the threshold of becoming an adult.
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10/10
War leave damage in its wake; ethnic war is worse
Red-12523 August 2019
Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams (2006) was written and directed by Jasmila Zbanic.

The movie stars Mirjana Karanovic as Esma, who is raising her teen-age daughter as a single mother. Luna Mijovic portrays Sara, her daughter.

This is a brilliant, but disturbing film. Esma is hard-pressed to find work, and Sara is troubled young woman.

Grbavica is a neighborhood in Sarajevo, which underwent years of siege by the Serbian army. Most of us know something about the Serbian war crimes during the Yugoslav war. Probably most of us probably don't know enough, especially about the aftermath of the war. This film shows us people scarred forever about what happened to them before 1995, when the war ended.

Zbanic is a brilliant director, and the two lead actors are very talented. I won't say anything more about the plot, because the movie will work better if you view it without too much advance information.

We saw the film on DVD, where it worked well. It's always best to see a movie in a theater, but, because that's unlikely, see Grbavica on the small screen. You'll be rewarded by watching a truly excellent movie.

To make the film easier to understand, I'll define two words. One is "Chetnik," which in this context means Serbian soldiers. The other is "Shaheen," which we usually spell as "Shahid." That's a general term for "martyr," but in this context it means Bosnian soldiers killed by the Serbs.

Grbavica has a pretty good IMDb rating of 7.2. I think it's much better than that.
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8/10
Do not read any keywords or detailed plot descriptions, for your own sake
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews28 October 2009
Please stay away from any potential source of spoilers for this prior to your initial viewing. This is a compelling piece, and I hope everyone who is mature enough for it will watch it. It is about a mother and daughter in Bosnia, trying to make ends meet after the end of the Balkan war. You do not need to have much, if any, prior knowledge of the country or culture to appreciate this. Zbanic directs it with great skill, nothing is excessive, it all fits perfectly, and a lot is gone into in 90 consistently well-paced minutes. Anyone reluctant to try foreign films ought to give this one a chance. This can help prove that not only the West can produce accessible movies. I understand that some feel that this takes sides in the conflict, but I cannot claim to concur with that. And in fact, this is such a universal story of pain and struggle that it can be applied to countless other locations around the world. If any finger-pointing can be claimed to occur in this, it is towards battle. The character are all well-written, credible and well-developed. Every acting performance is completely spot-on. Karanovic as the overworked Esma and Mijovic as the rebellious, tomboy-ish Sara are spellbinding. Music is well-chosen. The editing and cinematography are excellent. This gripping tragedy engages the audience, and emotionally affects us without being manipulative. I am not aware of dubs, and in any case I suggest just accepting the subtitles. Not understanding a word of what was spoken, I can't say for sure about the amount; however, I believe there is at least a little strong language. There is brief nudity and arguably sexuality, as well as disturbing content, in this. I recommend this warmly to any fans of drama who are old enough. 8/10
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8/10
Excellent!
petarmatic17 December 2013
Whenever I watch film connected to Sarajevo I am touched to the bottom of my soul.

So much was said about this film, that I do not have anything much to add except if you like films on ex Yugoslav theme this is a must see.

Jasmila Zbanic always wanted to be a film director, and when you have a talent like she has it has to happen. I know the war stopped her for some years to become a successful film director, but she survived the war and she made it. Many Sarajevans can not say the same, dead mouth do not speak. On that theme watch other film made by Zbanic For those who can not tell the tales.

Jasmila since we are the same generation growing up in a relatively small city like Sarajevo is, we knew all about each other. I also wanted to be a successful film director, may be I would of, if I did not like the other kind of films you do not like. You know those when actors have no clothes on while acting ;) May be the words you uttered: Petar Matic can not be a film director because he likes porn! condemned me for ever. Since that damnation happened all was bad for me, I would never have a real chance in life, not to say film directing was lost for me for ever. I know I did some semi professional work but that was really not good. I would give myself 1 out of 10 for those pitiful film directing I tried. You simply have to have training in the best film schools in order to make it. I never got to it. I thought there was time. Time expired for me.
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8/10
Life in a post-war world
Buddy-5115 August 2007
Despite its romanticized, optimistic title, "Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams" actually takes place in a world of shell-shocked survivors. Nearly a decade after the end of the Balkans War, the citizens of Sarajevo (Grbavica is a quarter located in that city) are still attempting to pick up the pieces of their shattered psyches and somehow move on with their lives. Even as bodies are continually being unearthed in mass graves scattered throughout the area, and residents search desperately for remains of their missing loved ones, a veneer of "normalcy" has returned to the city, as citizens cope with the everyday concerns of earning a living, raising children, caring for aging parents, falling in love. Yet, the extent of the emotional scarring is still greatly in evidence: in women attending group therapy sessions designed to help them cope with their losses; in youngsters crowding into noisy nightclubs as a means of escaping the horrors of the past; and, most tellingly perhaps, in the use of dark humor and strangely inappropriate laughter as a major coping mechanism for the beleaguered survivors.

Against this searing backdrop, "Grbavica" focuses on two main characters: Esma, a struggling seamstress who has lost a father and perhaps a husband in the war, and Sara, her teenaged daughter who, on top of the "growing pains" common to teens everywhere, has her own unique set of problems to deal with. One of those includes a major shocking secret about her father revealed late in the film. Mirjana Karanovic and Luna Mijovic, who make a completely convincing mother/daughter team, deliver heartrending, sensitive performances as the parent and child struggling in a world seemingly bereft of joy, hope and happiness, while Leon Lucev offers fine support as a potential love interest for the overburdened seamstress.

Writer/director Jasmila Zbanic has fashioned a film that calls to mind the groundbreaking work by the Italian neo-realists of the post-World War II era. For despite the grimness of its setting, the film suggests that the healing process may have already begun for the nation as well as for its people, and that where there is life there is always hope. The very fact that "Grbavica" is an Austrian/Bosnian-Herzegovinian/German/Croatian co-production attests to that possibility.
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8/10
War and consequences
kosmasp20 April 2007
This movie is not entertainment in the (Hollywood) main stream kind of meaning. You're not supposed to feel good about anything. Why should you, while watching a woman in her desperate attempts to lead a normal life after a war (balkan war) that destroyed so many homes? The answer is, you should feel her pain and that is the tricky part for the director and the script. Can they still hold their audience, while showing us raw and gritty life situations, where we might even hate the main character?

The answer is yes! They can. But which is also a testament to the actress! Yes this is a drama, about the effects a war can have on people and how they try to deal with it ... and it is a good one at that!
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