

Their conversations range across universal teen touchstones, including The Vampire Diaries and The Big Bang Theory, while the subtitles contain sassy slang translations like “crazy biatchez”. As evening turns to night, the dramatic focus shifts to the imprisoned teens as they rampage through the empty building, fighting and flirting, boozing and smoking weed, jostling for sexual and social status.


When her assailants refuse to identify themselves, she angrily confiscates everybody’s phone and leaves, locking her entire class inside the school. The next day in class, Olja is shocked to discover her students sharing phonecam footage of the attack. One night, she is attacked in the street by masked youths who splash her with red paint, branding her a “Communist”. Married to visual artist Uglješa ( Dragan Mi?anovi?), whose latest exhibition has angered conservatives by mocking Serbia’s religious right, Olja is routinely dismissed as a leftie do-gooder by students and fellow teachers alike. Hristina Popovi? ( Circles, The Parade) plays Olja, an idealistic young history teacher trying to impart liberal values to her class of noisy, belligerent, alienated, selfie-taking teenagers. Next to Me takes place in a crumbling Belgrade high school. While Serbian cinema rarely makes waves outside the Balkans, this engaging, funny, humane teen drama has stronger credentials than most, especially for any shameless distributors willing to exploit its superficial similarities to the much-loved 1985 John Hughes classic.Īlan Ruck Explains Why 'Ferris Bueller' Crew Cheered When the Ferrari Was Destroyed Next To Me picks up on some of the same themes of juvenile delinquency and right-wing nationalism, but it is also a warmer and more nuanced snapshot of contemporary youth. The biggest domestic box office hit of 2010, it earned him death threats as well as numerous festival awards. Rapturously received at the Sarajevo Film Festival last week, where it won the Young Audience Award, the film opens domestically later this month.įilipovi?’s last film was Skinning, a political drama about Neo-Nazi skinheads in Serbia. A youth-centric ensemble drama about a class of rowdy high schoolers confined to an after-hours detention, Next To Me was conceived by its writer-director Stevan Filipovi? while teaching at the Belgrade Academy of Arts, working with his own student actors to help shape the story. The situation makes them realize that there are many things they do not know about each other.Finally it’s here: that Serbian remake of The Breakfast Club we have all been waiting three decades to see. In order to solve the problem, students start communicating with each other.

After their negative reaction, she decides to lock them in school until they change their mind. She decides to take their mobile phones, and warn them about going to the police, if they do not tell her who are the attackers. Afterwards she sees one of her students watching the video of her attack, and she realizes their involvement. Group of hooligans sees the exhibit as the reason to attack the professor. The professor is also married to the painter, whose latest exhibit causes strong reactions. She tries to convince the principal of the school to become more interested in her students. Her fight is actually the fight against powerful people, who do not care about their jobs and responsibilities. The story begins with a young and enthusiastic high school professor who is interested in alternative methods of education.
