Life Is a Miracle
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Life Is a Miracle | |
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File:Zivot je cudo.jpg
The Life is a Miracle movie poster
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Живот је чудо Život je čudo |
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Directed by | Emir Kusturica |
Produced by | Alain Sarde Emir & Maja Kusturica |
Written by | Ranko Božić Emir Kusturica |
Starring | Slavko Štimac Nataša Šolak Vesna Trivalić Vuk Kostić |
Music by | Dejo Sparavalo Emir Kusturica |
Cinematography | Michel Amathieu |
Edited by | Svetolik Zajc |
Distributed by | Mars Distribution |
Release dates
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2004 |
Running time
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155 minutes |
Country | Serbia |
Language | Serbo-Croatian |
Budget | US$8,000,000 |
Box office | $634,896 (Italy) $345,862 (Russia & CIS) $325,076 (Spain) $197,080 (Poland) |
Life Is a Miracle (Serbian: Život je čudo ; Serbian Cyrillic: Живот је чудо) is a Serbian drama film directed by Emir Kusturica in 2004. It was entered into the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.[1]
Contents
Plot
The film opens just as construction has been completed on a railway connecting a mountainous regions of eastern Bosnia and western Serbia in 1992. Luka, a Serbian engineer, has moved to Bosnia from Belgrade with his mentally unstable wife, Jadranka, and his football-playing son, Miloš, to run a railway station and act as caretaker. Luka is at work preparing the opening of the railway while Miloš attempts to become a professional footballer with the Partizan team. Utterly engrossed in his work and blinded by natural optimism, Luka remains deaf to the increasingly persistent rumblings of war, which has broken out in Croatia and threatens to spread.
When the conflict explodes, Miloš is denied his place on the football field when he must join the Serbian army, and Jadranka disappears on the arm of a Hungarian musician. Eventually, he receives news that Miloš has been taken prisoner of war. Luka considers suicide, but a profiteering acquaintance presents him with Sabaha, a Bosnian Muslim whom he has taken hostage.
Luka intends to exchange Sabaha for Miloš, but the two fall in love after they are forced to flee deeper into Serb-controlled territory. When a UN-enforced prisoner exchange is finally arranged, Luka and Sabaha try to escape to Serbia, but Sabaha is wounded by a Bosnian sniper as they attempt to cross the Drina river. Army nurses narrowly manage to save Sabaha's life, and she is exchanged for Miloš, along with other prisoners. Jadranka also returns, and the family is reunited in their old home, but Luka is lovesick. He lies down in front of a train, but when the train stops to avoid running over a mule, it is revealed that Sabaha is on board, and the two ride away on the mule.
Cast
- Slavko Štimac - Luka
- Nataša Šolak - Sabaha
- Vesna Trivalić - Jadranka
- Vuk Kostić - Milos
- Aleksandar Berček - Veljo
- Stribor Kusturica - Captain Aleksic
- Nikola Kojo - Filipovic
- Mirjana Karanović - Nada
- Branislav Lalević - President
See also
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Life Is a Miracle at IMDb
- Life Is a Miracle at AllMovie
- Life Is a Miracle at Rotten Tomatoes
- Life Is a Miracle at Box Office Mojo
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Serbian-language text
- Lang and lang-xx using deprecated ISO 639 codes
- 2004 films
- Serbian films
- Films directed by Emir Kusturica
- Serbian musical films
- Serbo-Croatian-language films
- Bosnian War films
- Serbian drama films
- 2000s drama films
- Serbian comedy films
- Serbian war films
- Films set in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Films produced by Alain Sarde