, 1h38 Directed byGoran Marković GenresDrama, Fantastic, Comedy, Comedy-drama, Fantasy ThemesThéâtre, Films based on plays ActorsBogdan Diklić, Dragan Nikolić, Olivera Marković, Danilo Stojković, Mirjana Karanović, Branko Plesa Rating81% An archaeological team, digging in a remote village and led by an old professor, unearths an old Roman artifact, a gravestone bearing some mysterious inscriptions. After realizing that they have stumbled upon something precious, the professor collapses with a heart attack. Seemingly dead for people around him, he finds himself in a sort of afterlife state and realizes that the stone marked a passage into the classical underworld so he starts mingling with the antique spirits of the dead. The spirits themselves appear just as silly and petty as the peasants from the village above them, and in their desire to see what happened to their descendants, they find themselves surprised by the modern world of the living.
, 1h33 GenresThriller, Comedy, Horror ActorsTaško Načić, Sonja Savić, Radmila Savićević, Živojin Milenković, Branimir Brstina, Bata Kameni Roles Pera Mitić Rating79% In the mid-1980s Belgrade finally gets its first serial killer: an awkward carnations seller named Pera Mitić (Taško Načić). Mitić is an overweight 48-year-old man who is in an Oedipus kind of way connected to his aging mother. His mother often punishes him when he does not sell any of the carnation flowers. His punishments include kneeling on nutshells while being slapped by his mother or being locked in the water tank. This is the reason why he starts killing every girl who refuses to buy his flowers. Mitić's character can be compared to Norman Bates's character and relationship with his mother.
, 1h27 GenresDrama, Comedy, Adventure ThemesPolitical films ActorsPavle Vuisić, Dragan Nikolić, Danilo Stojković, Taško Načić, Boro Stjepanović, Aleksandar Berček Rating86% On Saturday, April 5, 1941, one day before the Nazi invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a colourful group of random passengers on a country road deep in the heart of Serbia board a dilapidated Krstić & Son bus, headed for the capital Belgrade: two Gypsy musicians, a World War I veteran, a Germanophile, a budding singer, a sickly looking man, and a hunter with a rifle. The bus is owned by Krstić Sr., and driven by his impressionable son Miško.