CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
7.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una mujer y su hija luchan por sobrevivir después de las secuelas de la Guerra de Bosnia.Una mujer y su hija luchan por sobrevivir después de las secuelas de la Guerra de Bosnia.Una mujer y su hija luchan por sobrevivir después de las secuelas de la Guerra de Bosnia.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 12 premios ganados y 7 nominaciones en total
Luna Lozic
- Sara
- (as Luna Mijovic)
Jasna Beri
- Sabina
- (as Jasna Ornela Berry)
Semka Sokolovic-Bertok
- Pelda's Mother
- (as Semka Sokolovic)
Emina Minka Muftic
- Vasvija
- (as Minka Muftic)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This is Jasmila Zbanic's debut movie. It is about the painful aftermath of the Bosnian war and focuses on a Bosnian woman and her 12 years old daughter Sara. They are living in Grbavica, a quarter of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo. Esma needs money to pay a school trip for Sara, even though a certificate proving that Sara's father was a war hero would allow her to join free.
The movie won the Golden Berlin Bear in 2006, the main character is beautifully interpreted by Mirjana Karanovic as well as the daughter by Luna Zimic Mijovic, the looming reality of post war is crudely represented, but I wouldn't say this is a masterpiece. It lacks the real density of the story and, apart from the two main characters, the others are just sketched.
However this director deserves much attention as the movie "Quo vadis, Aida" will lately prove.
The movie won the Golden Berlin Bear in 2006, the main character is beautifully interpreted by Mirjana Karanovic as well as the daughter by Luna Zimic Mijovic, the looming reality of post war is crudely represented, but I wouldn't say this is a masterpiece. It lacks the real density of the story and, apart from the two main characters, the others are just sketched.
However this director deserves much attention as the movie "Quo vadis, Aida" will lately prove.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
10kors2003
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)
(excuse, my English is not so good)
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaGrbavica is a district of Sarajevo and translates to "hunchbacked woman".
- ConexionesFeatured in Smagsdommerne: Episode #5.12 (2007)
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- How long is Grbavica?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 43,460
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 4,977
- 18 feb 2007
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 848,073
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 30min(90 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
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