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      • So Hot Was the Cannon
        • So Hot Was the Cannon

          Top je bio vreo

          • Country:
          • Serbia, Republic of Srpska-Bosnia and Herzegovina 2014
          • Group:
          • Fest presents
          • Duration:
          • 100'
          • Director:
          • Slobodan Skerlić
          • Screenplay:
          • Slobodan Skerlić (po romanu Vladimira Kecmanovića)
          • Cast:
          • Stanislav Ručanov, Anita Mančić, Muhamed Dupovac, Mugdim Avgadić, Slavko Štimac, Nikola Đuričko, Milica Mihajlović, Gordana Gadžić, Ivica Vidović, Mira Banjac, Bojana Maljević, Feđa Štukan, Aleksandar Stojković, Faketa Salihbegović Avdagić, Miro Barnjak,
          • Festivals:
          • FEST 2014, Međunarodni filmski festival Beograd (Svetska premijera)
          • Cinematographer:
          • Dušan Joksimović
          • Editing:
          • Đorđe Marković
          • Production Design:
          • Kiril Spaseski
          • Sound:
          • Aleksandar Protić
          • Production:
          • Drina film i Balkan film
          • Koproducenti:
          • Radio televizija Republike Srpske; Filmski centar Srbije; Ministarstvo kulture i informisanja Republike Srbije; Republika Srpska - predsednik
          • Producers:
          • Tihomir Stanić
          • Print Source:
          • MegaCom Film
        • Showing

          28. Feb | 19:00 | 500 RSD
          Sava centar

          01. Mar | 13:30 | 250 RSD
          Sava centar

          01. Mar | 17:00 | 250 RSD
          Fontana

        • SYNOPSIS

          During the siege of Sarajevo in 1994 a grenade fired from a nerby hill kills the parents of a ten year old boy. The boy looses his ability to speak. A neighbour lady adopts and takes care of him. The boy is thrown out from his destroyed apartment and he begins to prowl around the city with a schoolmate. Too early and too soon, he goes through the process of growing up. He learns the meaning of words such as force, death, sex. He learns how to achieve. He learns about the values. He learns what matters the most. The lady neighbour unsuccessfully tries to protect him, but the boy rushes to his own destruction. Death and sufffering have become his everyday company.

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