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1-12 of 12
- A man living in solitude on the banks of the Danube until a wild boar gets trapped near his house and foreign investors want to dump nuclear waste in the local village.
- A tragic comedy about an orphan girl who knows nothing better than the animal way but at the end comes to realize her only chance - to be human.
- Bulgarian Medical 'Sitcom' Comedy TV Series. The first episode was broadcast in 1999, and the last one in 2010.
- Ada and Alexander are confused twenty-somethings. They decide to live together at an old attic, where Ada had lived as a child. They set to do a minor repair with the help of their closest friends - Joro, Kossio and The Small guy. This however turns into a destructive party and it becomes clear that everybody from that group has problems facing the responsibilities of adulthood.
- The billy goat has come down to earth with a mission - to prevent people from finding a treasure hidden near an ancient Thracian sanctuary. The trumpet player, Jonah, moves into the remains of his grandfather's house near where the treasure is hidden. In a tunnel under the house he finds a stone with a bird engraved on it and a map with an inscription in Arabic: "To have a house of gold, fall onto the sky and find the twin!" A copy of the same map brings Rumba and Emma to the same place. Rumba is Bulgarian and a passionate treasure-hunter. His wife is American and studies Bulgarian folklore as a way to fight globalization. Rumba wants to buy Jonah's property so he can find the treasure. Jonah, whose flat in town was taken away from him by other foreigners because of debts, is afraid that the newcomers will deprive him of this property, too. A conflict arises between the foreign woman and the trumpet player that is strengthened by Jonah's extreme nationalism. Two more people get mixed up in the conflict: Anani, Jonah's elderly neighbor, and the Gypsy Ivanka, a woman Jonah sleeps with from time to time. Emma and Jonah start out as bitter enemies. They go through a number of ups and downs until in the end they begin to feel strongly attracted to each other.
- The film is an anti-fairy-tale. If normal fairy-tales begin with "Once upon a time", this one has to start with "Once upon a no-time". The heroes of this anti-fairy-tale are a man and a young woman, who used to be classmates a long time ago. Their present meeting is neither accidental, nor wished for, but it happens to be fatal, because love comes. A little bit odd, as a matter of fact. But is there ordinary love? Especially when it is reared with the prose of Lyudmila Petroushevskaya. She insisted that the most important thing is to keep the sorrow of the story.
- This film is about the former Communist Party House in the center of Sofia, with its huge spaces and endless corridors, its granite, marble and carved oak desks, with its five-pointed stars, hammers, sickles... There is emptiness now. The people who commanded our destinies are no longer here. A well-known laughter haunts the silent offices and corridors. All of this is situated on the top of the ruins of the busiest commercial part of Sofia before the WWII, on top of ruins of countless altered human lives. However, everything passes. Lenin and Dimitrov are down from the pedestals. Young trees shade the Citadel, becomes overgrown by the smoke of an incendiary attempt...
- America meets a father with his three already grown up sons.
- The film follows a trip with a bus from Sofia to Berlin. It looks like whole Bulgaria is on the bus.
- The film deals with the confessions of three prisoners who have committed murder.
- The intimate tale of a family can encapsulate the evolution and state of the society in which it lives. A privileged insight into the family album may enable the audience to relive important chapters in history and sense the mood of the times. The family in this story is that of writer Angelika Schrobsdorff. It is almost as if major characters from her work had developed a life of their own to reveal the invisible pages we could not find in her books.