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Black Birds (film)

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Directed by
  
Eduard Galić

Edited by
  
Boris Tešija

Running time
  
92 minutes

Director
  
Eduard Galić

Story by
  
Grgo Gamulin

8.3/10
IMDb

Music by
  
Anđelko Klobučar

Distributed by
  
Viba Film

Initial release
  
18 July 1967 (Yugoslavia)

Music director
  
Anđelko Klobučar

Cinematography
  
Mile de Gleria

Black Birds (film) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Release date
  
July 18, 1967 (1967-07-18) (Yugoslavia)

Cast
  
Rade Šerbedžija, Fabijan Šovagović, Relja Bašić, Vanja Drach, Ivo Serdar

Similar
  
Bastard, Gravitation, A Man Who Liked Funerals, Red Wheat, Back of the Medal

When black birds fly movie review uw r


Black Birds (Crne ptice) is a 1967 Yugoslavian war drama film directed by Eduard Galić.

Contents

The original idea and script were by Grgo Gamulin. Zoran Tadić was the scenario assistant. The original music was composed by Anđelko Klobučar. The cinematography was by Mile de Gleria. The film editing was by Boris Tešija. The production design was by Branko Hundić.

Plot

The film is a story about a group of prisoners in the Ustasha-run Stara Gradiška concentration camp that takes place during the final days of World War II. The Ustashas plan to transport the prisoners to a bridge, which they will blow up. At the same time, Partisan troops are closing in on the camp, and the prisoners themselves are hatching a plot to save their lives...

Cast

  • Voja Mirić
  • Fabijan Šovagović
  • Ivan Šubić
  • Ivo Serdar
  • Vanja Drach
  • Rade Šerbedžija (uncredited)
  • Relja Bašić
  • Iva Marjanović
  • Ivica Katić
  • Ratko Buljan
  • Pavle Bogdanović
  • Nikola Gec
  • Antun Vrdoljak
  • Špiro Guberina
  • Uglješa Kojadinović
  • Background and production

    By the time Eduard Galić set out to direct Black Birds, his debut feature film, he was already an established television director and an author of award-winning documentaries. He developed an interest in a screenplay written by Grgo Gamulin, Galić's former father-in-law, that drew heavily on his personal experiences in World War II. As a long-time leftist, Gamulin spent the entire war imprisoned, and managed to escape from the Lepoglava-Stara Gradiška train on 17 April 1945, shortly before he was due to be executed.

    Galić secured funding for the film and, after negotiations with Jadran Film fell through, he and Fadil Hadžić founded Most, an independent production collective. The arrangements were made to produce Black Birds and Hadžić's Protest in partnership with Viba Film, a Slovene production company.

    Galić's work on the screenplay created a conflict with Gamulin. While the Gamulin's original work was a straightforward action drama, Galić preferred the then highly influential auteur film. Together with Zoran Tadić, the assistant director, and Petar Krelja, Galić developed a new outline of the film in which three central characters were a psalm-quoting Ustasha lieutenant (Šovagović), an engineer tasked with blowing up the bridge (Mirić), and an enigmatic prisoner (Šerbedžija, in his first major film role). Gamulin felt that the new version of the screenplay had nothing to do with his original, and asked for his name to be removed from the credits. In the end, Gamulin was credited for the story, while the screenplay credits were omitted entirely.

    Reception

    In its premiere, Black Birds was relegated to the out-of-competition section of the Pula Film Festival, and received very little attention. It was largely overshadowed by very strong contemporary films that included Aleksandar Petrović's I Even Met Happy Gypsies, Puriša Đorđević's The Morning, and Ante Babaja's The Birch Tree. Galić was disappointed by his film's failure, and the only modest consolation for him was an extra fee that he received due to Black Birds being distributed in the Soviet Union.

    The film was virtually forgotten until it was screened at the 2010 Subversive Festival in Zagreb. On this occasion, the Croatian film critic Nenad Polimac described Black Birds as "the most interesting discovery of the festival" and a "sensation", praising its visual qualities and expressiveness. In 2012, the film was digitally restored by the Slovene Film Archives.

    References

    Black Birds (film) Wikipedia