Retrospektive 2019

Hajka

Manhunt
Živojin Pavlović
YUG 1977
104 min
V'19

Kein heroischer Kampf, sondern eine hoffnungslose Menschenjagd: Eine versprengte Gruppe von Partisanen flieht vor italienischen Besatzern in die montenegrinischen Berge. Anstelle Krieg und Revolution zu verherrlichen, schildert HAJKA Selbstzweifel und Ernüchterung und zeigt ein scheinbar aktives Kollektiv als Schar meist passiver oder opportunistischer Individuen. Schockierend auch der Blick auf den Tod nicht als edles Opfer für ein besseres Morgen, sondern als etwas Böses, Brutales, Sinnloses und vor allem völlig Zufälliges. Die trostloseste und wahrscheinlich auch die genaueste Darstellung jugoslawischer Partisanen in dieser Retrospektive.

Am 13.11. mit einer Einführung von Andrej Šprah.

 

Yugoslavia’s most important contribution to the global history of cinema by far goes by the name of Živojin Pavlović. A proper Renaissance man, Pavlović was an accomplished painter, writer (of both fiction and theory), educator, and, above all, filmmaker whose body of work still needs to be properly discovered and evaluated beyond the borders of the former Yugoslavia. More interested in contemporary reality and best known for a series of seminal Black Wave works dealing with contemporary subjects, Pavlović nevertheless applied his razor-sharp critical apparatus, penchant for dirty naturalism, and stunning visual sense twice to the subject of World War II in Yugoslavia. His first partisan film HAJKA is an account not of heroic struggles, but of a hopeless manhunt, portraying a broken division of partisans constantly fleeing from Italian occupying forces and local traitors in the hills of Montenegro. In place of glorifying war and revolution, Pavlović offers only self-doubt and disillusion. He shows a seemingly active collective as a swarm of mostly passive or opportunistic individuals. Most shockingly of all, he shows death – and does so repeatedly – not as a noble sacrifice for a better tomorrow, but as something nasty, brutal, meaningless and, above all, completely random. The bleakest, yet likely most accurate depiction of Yugoslavian partisans in this entire retrospective at the same time.

On November 13th, with an introduction by Andrej Šprah.

Credits
  • Rade Šerbedžija - Inspector Vigot
  • Velimir (Bata) Živojinović
  • Pavle Vuisić
  • Boro Begović
  • Ratislav Jović
  • Zaim Muzaferija
  • Lazar Ristovski
  • Barbara Nielsen
  • Slobodan Marković
  • Živojin Pavlović (basierend auf dem gleichnamigen Roman von Mihailo Lalić)
  • Milorad Jakšić-Fando
  • Olga Skrigin
Centar FRZ SR Srbije
35 mm
col
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