No Man`s Land (UK)
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Winner of the Best Screenplay award at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival
Certificate: 15
Running Time: 93 mins
Retail Price: £19.99
Release Date:
Content Type: Movie
Synopsis:
Danis Tanovic`s darkly comic satire No Man`s Land is the critically acclaimed winner of numerous awards, including both an Oscar and a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film and the Best Screenplay award at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. The Bosnian conflict, 1993. Two enemy soldiers, Bosnian Chiki (Branko Djuric) and Serbian Nino (Rene Bitorajac), find themselves stranded together in a trench positioned between enemy lines. Elsewhere in the trench, Cera (Filip Sovagovic), another Bosnian soldier, presumed dead, is lying on a spring-loaded mine.
Despite receiving orders not to intervene, frustrated UN Sergeant Marchand (Georges Siatidis) is determined to free the soldiers from their bizarre and dangerous predicament. When an international TV journalist, Jane Livingstone (Katrin Cartlidge), picks up on the story the incident attracts the attention of the world`s press turning the tense situation into a media circus. The stakes are raised when, to the astonishment of Chiki and Nino, Cera regains consciousness. If he moves, the booby-trapped mine will explode killing them all.
Special Features:
Video Tracks:
Widescreen Anamorphic 1.78:1
Subtitle Tracks:
English
Directed By:
Danis Tanovic
Written By:
Danis Tanovic
Starring:
Serge-Henri Valcke
Georges Siatidis
Filip Sovagovic
Rene Bitorajac
Branko Djuric
Soundtrack By:
Danis Tanovic
Director of Photography:
Walther van den Ende
Editor:
Francesca Calvelli
Costume Designer:
Zvonka Makuc
Production Designer:
Dusko Milavec
Producer:
Cat Villiers
Igor Pedicek
Marco Muller
Cédomir Kolar
Dunja Klemenc
Marion Hänsel
Frédérique Dumas-Zajdela
Judy Counihan
Marc Baschet
Distributor:
Momentum Pictures
Your Opinions and Comments
"No Man`s Land" is tense, powerful, ironic film, finding prickly scraps of futile humor in the devastating horror of war.
I managed to find it on DVD.co.uk and ordered it immediately.
This was the first "World Cinema/ Foreign language" DVD I had ever ordered and TBH I am extremely pleased I finally bought it.
This excellent movie showed why, IMHO, civil war is the most tragic and heart breaking of any type of conflict. The fact that the two main combatants in the trench knew people their enemy knew shows the complete and utter futility of any war and how in essence brother may be turned against brother. For me though this fine movie showed the complete and utter depravity of a "Civil War". Civil War now there is a real contradiction of terms.
Both combatants acknowledged that both sides had commited great atrocities yet both felt they were innocent of any crimes against humanity or genocide and believed that the enemy had staged the massacres for the news teams that were ever present in the Balkan conflict.
There are many extremely saddening parts in this movie yet there are a few darkly comic parts as well which made the movie even more powerful in its potrayal of a society that was collapsing around their very ears.
To finish I can only say that the closing scenes were the saddest scenes I have ever seen in any movie simply because the outcome was completely unexpected to me anyway. The final minute is heart breaking and brought a lump to my throat and tears to my eyes simply out of a feeling of complete and utter loneliness and helplessness.
Although the movie is just that, a movie, it shows the complete and utter failure of the U.N. at that sad moment in our worlds history. The sheer bueracratic nightmare that evolved when a simple French squaddie tried to intervene makes a complete and utter laughing stock of the U.N. and its many "Advisors" in the Balkans.
I may come back and edit this after I watch the movie again but to me this ranks alongside "All quiet etc" as a fine anti-war movie and would grace any collection.