Underground (Film)
Director: | Emir Kusturica |
Writers: | Dusan Kovacevic and Emir Kusturica |
Director of Photography: | Vilko Filac |
Editor: | Branka Ceperac |
Music: | Goran Bregovic |
Production Designer: | Miljen Kreka Kljakovic |
Producers: | Karl Baumgartner and Maksa Catovic |
New Yorker Films; NR; 169 minutes | |
Release: | 6/97 |
Cast: | Miki Manojlovic, Lazar Ristovski, Mirjana Karanovic, Slavko Stimac and Srdjan Todorovic |
Kusturica's Underground won the Palm d'Or at Cannes in 1995, and it took more than two years for a U.S. release. The length, though cut from 192 to 169 minutes, partially explains the delay, but it's more likely that the distributors didn't think American audiences would have an appetite for a political film about the former Yugoslavia. In this sprawling, brawling epic that spans 60 years, Marko (Manojlovic) and Blacky (Ristovski) team up to battle occupying Nazis and fall in love with the same woman, Vera (Karanovic). When World War II intensifies, Marko, Blacky and a group of fellow Serbs hide out in a bunker and begin manufacturing weapons. Only Marko emerges during the day, selling the munitions and rising in the Communist Party ranks. Although the war ends, Marko keeps his comrades in the dark and continues to profit from their underground work.