Totally revealing himself, Kolbas uses his own life story as a paradigm of the war that has changed everybody's lives.
A fragment of Croatia’s transition period, made ''in fond memory'' of the forty-odd workers for whom the fight against the untouchable economic and political elite was the only acceptable option.
Bravely and in an artistically mature way, in her film ''Category: Optimist'' Lana Šarić deals with her own disease and its consequences. This unique film wins audience with its optimism, even in the toughest of situations.
Blind persons, persons in wheelchairs and developmentally challenged children talk about the role of guide dogs in their lives.
A brilliant satire in which the director confronts the Mimara Museum of today and the nation's great expectations of the collection that was supposed to become the "Louvre of Zagreb".
What is it that keeps people together? The protagonists' answers to this question underpin the film's story – a story about this undeterminable and often illogical desire to stay together despite of all.
A documentary in a form of a diary, depicting the life of a skinhead and the informal skinhead subculture in Zagreb.
Two short promo films about annual meetings of Jews and their friends from former Yugoslavia and from around the world.
A story about Daniel "Vajt" Bele, Zagreb's legend and one of the best and most daring skaters in the region.
Three veterans of Bosnian war – a Serb, a Croat and a Bosniak – talk about their war experience and share their memories… Three stories told by three men who fought on three different sides in the war that all of them consider absurd.
A film dedicated to Edvin Biuković, a comic-strip artist departed before his time.
Owing to the unusual blend of a socially relevant subject and a highly aestheticized auteur style, one critic called this film "Croatian documentary (anti)Twin Peaks"!
Eight years after filming homeless persons on Zagreb's Central Station, the director revisits the location in order to find out what has happened to his protagonists.
Severe torture and some seventy missing detainees is the reality of Split's Lora Stockade in which more than 1,000 persons from Split, Dalmatia, neighboring Bosnia-Herzegovina and the rump Yugoslavia were detained between 1992 and 1996.