Film Archive

Jahr

Sections (Film Archive)

Retrospective 2024
Filmstill Black Film
Black Film
Želimir Žilnik
One night, the filmmaker roams through Novi Sad, picks up homeless people and takes them home. A self-experimentation with a camera, somewhere between social reportage and activism.
Filmstill Black Film

Black Film

Crni film
Želimir Žilnik
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
Yugoslavia
1971
17 minutes
Serbian
Subtitles: 
English

1971, Novi Sad, a winter’s night. The filmmaker meets six homeless men, is outraged by the negligent state and takes matters into his own hand. As shelter cannot be found at short notice, he invites the men to his apartment, turning his wife into the involuntary accomplice of his relief operation. The experiment fails, but the film is in the can.
Želimir Žilnik is one of those representatives of the Yugoslavian Black Wave who won the hearts of the West. It is true that at home he found state-funded production opportunities for self- and bureaucracy-critical films like this one. He was even allowed to present them at domestic festivals. But he still experienced Yugoslavian censorship. Strangely enough, however, not with “Black Film“.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Želimir Žilnik
Cinematographer
Karpo Aćimović Godina
Editor
Kaća Stefanović
Producer
Neoplanta film
Sound
Dušan Ninkov
Retrospective 2024
Filmstill W.R. – Mysteries of the Organism
W.R. – Mysteries of the Organism
Dušan Makavejev
Does the sexual revolution complete the communist revolution? Some believe that Makavejev himself invented subversion. This footage, fiction and Wilhelm Reich film seems to confirm this.
Filmstill W.R. – Mysteries of the Organism

W.R. – Mysteries of the Organism

W.R. – Misterije organizma
Dušan Makavejev
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
Yugoslavia,
FRG
1971
85 minutes
Serbian,
English
Subtitles: 
English

A Soviet figure skater, a female Yugoslav sex partisan, a Vietnam veteran, Father Stalin and the Austro-American orgasm researcher Wilhelm Reich rumble in the belly of this film. Some people believe that Dušan Makavejev invented subversion in the first place. He exploited the gaps of freedom in the Yugoslav brand of socialism and developed an exceptional cinematic model which irritated both the dos and don’ts of the medium as well as those of political unambiguousness. The Western world was amused by this collage of feature, documentary and sexual education that transgressed all boundaries of ideology and modesty, but the tolerance of the Yugoslav censorship authorities was overstrained – at least temporarily. The 1971 screening ban was lifted in 1986. In 1988, Makavejev returned to Yugoslavia from the West.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dušan Makavejev
Script
Dušan Makavejev
Cinematographer
Predrag Popović, Aleksandar Petković
Editor
Ivanka Vukasović
Producer
Neoplanta film, Telepool
Score
Bojana Makavejev