Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-9 of 9
- A cocky teenage girl is struggling to reconcile with her halfhearted boyfriend on the very same day that she gets stabbed and wages a war with a local gang of bullies.
- Due to family problems, Christian and his three siblings live Tom Sawyerish childhood in the streets of Belgrade.
- Words and thoughts of Ivo Andric, Mesa Selimovic, Milos Crnjanski and other famous cultural figures of Serbia, spoken for Radio Belgrade and kept in its archives for decades, are visualized by contemporary Serbian artists.
- Choice between being a slave and a robot in archived Radio Belgrade interview with Radivoj Kasanin.
- Take a peek at the riches of Radio Belgrade's 90 years old audio archive. 9 stories told by Ivo Andric, Isidora Sekulic, Mirko Kovac and other prominent historical and cultural figures of 20th century Serbia and Yugoslavia come alive visualized by young artists. Radiovision is an animated documentary that brings to life stories buried in the archives of one of the oldest public radio stations in Europe - Radio Belgrade. Creative team roamed through the archives of audio interviews recorded from 1950s - 1990s and found magnificent stories that bring out the everlasting messages of love, honesty and dedication. Nine stories, told by some of the greatest writers, artists and intellectual minds that lived in Serbia and Yugoslavia throughout 40-year long history, are visualized by young Serbian illustrators, animators and visual artists. Ivo Andric tells the story of his childhood ''thirst for books'', Isidora Sekulic sends an inspiring message to young people across the world, Mirko Kovac remembers his youth spent in Belgrade's Cinamateque, Borislav Pekic wonders about the possibility of immortality, Rahela Ferari tells a shocking personal story from WW2, Timothy J. Byford recalls his childhood in English boarding school, Milos Crnjanski speaks of his journey to the far north of Europe, Radivoj Kasanin wonders whether it is worse ''to be a slave or a robot'' and Desanka Maksimovic takes us back to her childhood she spent surrounded by fictional characters she was reading about.
- Two homelands have I, Cuba and the night.
- Free animation game with broken plastic pieces, broken glass, crystal decorations, feathers, old photos and gummy candy - as an attempt to summarize a rich and music-dedicated life of Mihovil Logar.
- The last words of Isidora Sekulic, spoken in radio interview for Radio Belgrade in 1957.