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Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:42
Fresh:41
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: An emotionally blunt and gripping drama, Grbavica deftly explores the emotional toll that all wars take upon those who survive them.
Theatrical Release:15-12-2006
Synopsis: Single mother Esma lives with her 12-year-old daughter Sara in Sarajevo’s Grbavica neighborhood, where life is still being reconstructed after the 1990s Yugoslav wars. Unable to make ends meet... Single mother Esma lives with her 12-year-old daughter Sara in Sarajevo’s Grbavica neighborhood, where life is still being reconstructed after the 1990s Yugoslav wars. Unable to make ends meet with the meager government aid she receives, Esma takes a job as a cocktail waitress in a nightclub. Working all night is difficult for Esma physically and it also forces her to reluctantly spend less time with her daughter. Still haunted by violent events in her past, Esma attends group therapy sessions at the local Women’s Center. In addition to relying on her best friend Sabina, Esma also finds a kindred spirit in Pelda, a compassionate male co-worker from the nightclub. Feisty tomboy Sara begins to put soccer aside as she develops a close friendship with classmate Samir. The two sensitive young teenagers feel a strong bond because both lost their fathers in the war. But Samir is surprised to hear Sara doesn’t know the details of her father’s noble death. Sara’s father becomes an issue when she requires the certificate proving he died a shaheed, a holy war martyr, so that she can receive a discount for an upcoming school trip. Esma claims acquiring the certificate is difficult since his body has yet to be found. Meanwhile, Esma searches desperately to borrow money to pay for Sara’s trip. Confused Sara becomes violently upset when some classmates tease her for not being on the list of martyrs’ children. Realizing her mother has paid full price for the school trip, Sara aggressively demands the truth. Esma breaks down and brutally explains how the girl was conceived through rape in a POW camp. As painful as their confrontation is, it is Esma’s first real step toward overcoming her deep trauma. Despite Sara’s hurt, there is still an opening for a renewed relationship between mother and daughter. -- © Official Site [More]
Starring: Luna Mijovic, Mirjana Karanovic
Starring: Luna Mijovic, Mirjana Karanovic
Director: Jasmila Zbanic
Director: Jasmila Zbanic
Reviews for Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams
A convincing portrait of how ordinary people strive to get on with their lives in the wake of terrible conflict.
...the viewer is left with decent performances while waiting for the big payoff, which in this case isn't that big.
[Director Jasmila] Zbanic is such an acute observer of women's lives in their intimate details, and constructs such fine scenes, that I think this might be the best film to emerge from the aftermath of the Balkan conflict.
The point of the film, however, is not so much the climactic revelation of Sara’s true parentage, and the strangely sluggish narrative in which it is embedded, but rather the dismal day-by-day existence in postwar Sarajevo.
Jasmila Zbanic also deserves our admiration for casting Karanovic, and for making a film of great power about the fate of that ultimate contradiction -- a child born out of hatred.
Aided by two first-class performances by Karanovic and Mijovic, Grbavica is a low-key approach to one of the gravest, yet little-discussed problems of war.
Like its music, the film's emotions proceed from lament to screaming screed to chorus of hope.
Grbavica, like its heroine, is brave enough to try to find love among the ruins.
Zbanic's deeply personal saga allows us to see the savage price that women paid in the Balkan wars.
A powerful human drama exposing family dynamics and the deep wounds that war exacts.
Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams is a stilted but touching articulation of a Sarajevo suburb's collective grief years after the Bosnian War.
[Director] Zbanic takes an effective, low-key approach, telling the intimate story of a single mother and preteen daughter who live in Grbavica, a grim neighborhood that once served as an internment camp.
Gbravica is a womanly movie in the best sense: [writer-director] Zbanic has a deeply feminine sense of how crisis gets filtered through the moments of daily life.
Centering on a mother-daughter relationship, the Berlin Fest winner Grbavica operates on both realistic and symbolic levels, a personal film about the country's attempt to reconcile with the brutal Bosnian civil war and its painful aftermath.
A poignant and emotionally gripping story of a Bosnian single parent struggling to survive in Sarajevo and carrying deep physical and spiritual wounds from the 1990s wars.
Though in writer-director Jasmila Zbanic's gritty, affecting film the Bosnian war has been over for more than a decade, it is hardly absent in the memories of those struggling to lead normal lives amid the rubble.
Latest News for Grbavica: The Land of My Dreams
May 12, 2007:
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