Following the traces of his father, who was taken to captivity in Germany during WWII and never returned, film director Đorđe Kadijević finds what made him what he is now.
A Holy Place director Djordje Kadijevic looks back at how his early counter-revolutionary war films led to him inadvertently becoming part of the ‘Yugoslav Black Wave’, and how a polite but firm block on the making of any more such films led him into television and eventually towards the fantasy genre.
Sitcom about a family from Belgrade and their daily adventures. Gavrilo is a failing actor, his wife Danijela continues her college studies in her 40s, Jovana their daughter is a revolutionary youtuber and Velibor, their son, is focused on girls, cars and money - and lots of food. They live in a rented flat that is mostly usurped by their landlord Guliver at any time of day or night.
Đorđe Kadijević is a Serbian and Yugoslav film director, screenwriter and art critic. Kadijević is well known for his horror films and for TV series Vuk Karadžić, which won the Grand prix in Rome and was protected as European Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO, on the proposition of Umberto Eco.