Arab Times

Offering

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“I think the chaos of today is mirrored in the film. Like any good fairy tale, I hope it entertains while offering a new perspectiv­e on what’s happening in the world. Diamantino’s innocent perspectiv­e links it all together.”

Ronaldo’s Real Madrid teammate Keylor Navas, known as “Goalkeeper” for his strong Christian faith,

Serbian director Ognjen Glavonic says the topic of his new film, which tackles the lingering horror of the Kosovo war, probably explains why his script was rejected seven times.

“Teret” (The Load), which was to screen at Cannes on Saturday, addresses one of the grim secrets revealed after the war, a taboo subject in a country still struggling to confront its past.

It follows Vlada, a truck driver on the road from Kosovo to Belgrade, who discovers that he is transporti­ng the bodies of victims from war crimes committed by Serb forces in Kosovo.

Most of them are ethnic Albanian civilians, including many women and children.

Based on real events, the bodies are transporte­d to Serbia to be buried in mass graves in a bid to cover up the truth about the last of the wars that tore apart the former Yugoslavia.

The 1998-1999 conflict killed some 13,000 people, including 11,000 ethnic Albanians and ended with the NATO bombing of Serbia.

In 2001, just after the fall of Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic, the Serbian authoritie­s announced the discovery near Belgrade of the remains of 744 people, mainly Kosovo Albanians.

The mass grave was found in Batajnica, about 15 kms (nine miles) from the centre of Belgrade, at a special police unit camp.

But nearly 20 years on, the case has been largely forgotten and for the passing traveller, it is just a motorway exit between Belgrade and its airport.

Calls for a memorial have received less support than requests to build an Orthodox church near the site.

“I heard about the mass grave in Batajnica in 2009,” Glavonic, who was studying cinema in Belgrade at the time, told AFP.

It was the “depth of the mystery around the case that awakened my desire to talk about it,” the 33-year-old said.

Glavonic first delved in to the story with the documentar­y “Depth 2” before embarking on a movie that has taken seven years to see the light of day.

The publicly funded Film Center rejected his screenplay seven times.

“I think that the theme partly explains these rejections,” he said.

“It may be for the better. I’m more mature. Seven years ago it would not have been the same movie,” said the director, who grew up in the suburbs of Belgrade.

It is when Vlada discovers the nature of his cargo that the doubt-filled protagonis­t is tested, Glavonic said.

“He understand­s the truth about himself, the country where he lives and the war,” he said.

“I wanted to give the viewer the opportunit­y to put himself in his place, to think about what one would have done.

“The war and the horror are always present but in the background.”

Glavonic said he is not afraid of the reaction to his film in a country where those who question the actions of authoritie­s in the 1990s are often labelled traitors by nationalis­ts or tabloids.

“People are afraid of doctors, dentists, as children fear their first injection, but it is something that will eventually bring them good,” Glavonic said.

The film will be presented out of competitio­n in the Director’s Fortnight section at the world-famous festival.

The young director, who is making his debut at Cannes, follows in the footsteps of many greats of former Yugoslavia’s cinema.

But he declined to compare himself with renowned filmmakers Denis Tanovic, Emir Kusturica or Aleksandar Petrovic, all previous winners of the festival’s top prize, the Palme d’Or.

“I’m not competing for prizes,” he said.

LOS ANGELES:

Animation feature “Bombay Rose” is the first film to flow from a new partnershi­p between the UK’s Goldfinch Entertainm­ent and India’s Cinestaan Film Co.

“Bombay Rose” is directed by Gitanjali Rao and is inspired by the romance of Bollywood. While there are multiple human stories, arguably the biggest

Mystery

star is the seedy underbelly of Mumbai.

The film was previously greenlit by Cinestaan and France’s Les Films d’Ici. Goldfinch is to invest in the production and provide the music through Goldfinch Music. Lilian Kibedi’s new production and finance company, Akoberwa Films, also joins the picture as another financing partner. (RTRS)

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