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Anatema (2006)

Anatema (2006)

GENRESDrama,War
LANGAlbanian,Serbo-Croatian,English
ACTOR
Lumnie SopiDoug BarronBlerim GjociEnver Petrovci
DIRECTOR
Agim Sopi

SYNOPSICS

Anatema (2006) is a Albanian,Serbo-Croatian,English movie. Agim Sopi has directed this movie. Lumnie Sopi,Doug Barron,Blerim Gjoci,Enver Petrovci are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2006. Anatema (2006) is considered one of the best Drama,War movie in India and around the world.

Kosovar journalist Ema Berisha, working with two American journalists Laura and David Schwatz report from war torn Kosova. When the war reaches its highest peak the Americans are ordered to flee. They unsuccessfully try to persuade Ema to leave Kosova with them, but Ema is determined to stay. Upon returning home to marry. On her wedding night Serbian forces oust the refugee camps. The soldiers rape Emma. She becomes pregnant and gives birth to a baby girl, which she names Ana. She is abandoned by her husband, and friends for not getting rid of the child. Unable to feed her baby, reluctantly she puts her into an orphanage. The American journalist David returns with Ema's payment for her work. With this new capital she runs to the orphanage to retrieve her child only to discover it is close. She discovers that children are taken to a monastery to be sold, with the help of Doresa, the American David and the Kosovar Komandant Shpati she attempts to save her child.

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Anatema (2006) Trailers

Anatema (2006) Reviews

  • Very,very,very bad

    jvc12632011-07-24

    This movie is a junk! I 've seen this movie few years ago and i find it very funny.This movie is funny,because there is no truth in it,not even a little. I am from Serbia,and i can tell that there war a war crimes in Kosovo,from both sides,but storyline in this movie is stupid,acting is so bad ,that i wanted to cry and even Enver Petrovci is terrible (usualy ,he's a very good actor).This movie is made to flame up the hate of Albanian people in Kosovo toward Serbs,like they don't hate us already! Avoid this movie,not because of politics but because is a very bad,and probably you can find a better way to sped hour and a half,and not to waste it on this crap.

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  • Headache-Inducingly Putrid Propaganda Film

    rcoates-661-222492010-03-28

    History and politics aside, Anatema stinks. I saw this at a film festival a couple of years ago and remember it as probably the most grueling movie-going experience of my life. Anatema is one of those self-righteous duds that seeks to dictate to you exactly how you're supposed to feel about everything. If it wants you to feel outraged and saddened (which it usually does), it shows you a row of orphaned girls crying on cue, etc, etc. Anatema was bad, beyond bad, so relentlessly depressing and tasteless it brought tears to my eyes. I sat miserably, stupefied, twitching and sweating with the effort of stifling my giggles. I didn't know whether to laugh out loud or slash my wrists, and the only reason I didn't run screaming out of the theater is that some person connected with the production was in attendance, and I didn't want to humiliate him. If you feel passionately about the atrocities depicted in Anatema, you should abhor this film for trivializing the subject, turning it into an unwatchable exercise in cheapjack manipulative propaganda.

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  • Anathema in front of the 'blind spectator'

    hardyeva2010-04-24

    When mortal humans take the courage to sit face to face with the 'Goddess of War' and to see that which should remain unseen, and to speak for that, that is forbidden, then consciously face the condemnation. Such is Ema Berisha, the journalist from Kosova, the protagonist of the film 'ANATHEMA', The heroine at war and the hateful traitor in freedom. The war of Kosova, projected as a war principally against the civil population, part of which was Ema Berisha, has taken place far away from the eyes of the world, far away from the eyes of the mediums. In front of the 'blind spectator' to whom it was served only the fancy of that, that really happened. The events had been circulated from mouth-to-mouth, from family to families, from village to villages. And somewhere among the mud roads of the postwar Kosova, the dramatic events were hidden or disappeared completely from the collective's memory. In this manner was hidden the destiny of Ema Berisha and thousands of raped women as a sign of revenge. Without their blame, it was hidden the destiny of thousands of destroyed life's. While treating the destiny of the raped woman, this subject with such sensibility, face to one patriarchal mentality, in spite of that, the film 'ANATHEMA' does not claim to change the world or to save the human being, but speaking about that, that is forbidden to be spoken unfolding that, that dare not to be seen pretends to offer an alternative more encouraging and more human.

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  • Not Sure What to Think

    james-gall2012-11-17

    I just watched this film on the Internet hoping for some insight on the Balkan conflict. I remember the debate in the U.S. when the talk of NATO intervention began and didn't understand the complexity of the conflict then (despite trying to follow the major news coverage). I still don't. I hoped watching this non-U.S. film would be informative. It is a low budget film. The early section does seem like propaganda. Serbs are portrayed only as villains and never victims - often in very melodramatic scenes. War crimes were committed, but they occurred on all sides with victims of all ethnic groups. This is not addressed. The movie does get better in showing the post-war aftermath. I think this is because the character of Ema is sympathetic and her countrymen are shown in a more realistic way. Some are helpful despite their own suffering; some are openly antagonistic; some are corrupt and opportunistic in the post-war chaos. I think this would be true of any nation in a similar situation. This is not the objective film I wanted, but it did give me some insight into the feelings of one side of the conflict. I don't think it deserves a 10, but neither does it lack any merit as a commentary on the war and it's aftermath.

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  • By J.B.Spins

    christian-stevenson2008-10-21

    The horrors committed by the Serbian former Communists and their Bosnian Serb allies were horrendous, and the Free World's feckless response was a scandal, which has yet to be adequately captured on film. The Hunting Party had some intriguing moments, but was undercut by a weak lead performance and displayed more interest in criticizing NATO for a lack of zealousness pursuing war criminals than dramatizing the actual crimes. Though not perfect, writer-director Agim Sopi's Anatema (trailer here), now available on DVD, serves as a valuable corrective, shining a light on Serbian war crimes, in this case committed in Kosovo. Sopi's original intention was to document war crimes occurring in Kosovo with a documentary, but when the Serbian army confiscated his film, he was forced to shift his efforts to a narrative film. After surviving the subsequent brutality of the Serbs, Schwartz broadcasts his report, only to be recalled by his network due to the impending NATO intervention. He and his field producer want to take Berisha with them, but she insists on returning to her home in Pristine. Despite the temporary joy of a reunion with her fiancé, leading to their long postponed wedding, Pristine quickly turns into a nightmare. The Serbian forces occupy the city, deliberating using organized rape as a tool of terror and pacification, before expelling the survivors to Albania. On her return to Kosovo, Berisha is rejected by her husband and spurned by most of her friends. Nobody wants her to keep her baby (which for all she knows could be the product of her wedding night). The Kosovars do not want her to keep the presumed product of Serbian war crimes and issue of Serbian blood. The Serbs do not want such babies to survive as evidence of their crimes. Berisha is determined not to punish Ana, her unborn daughter, for the crimes of others. Indeed, Anatema (Ana + Ema) may well be the most pro-life film ever made. Berisha is forced to temporarily give up Ana for adoption, but when she returns to claim her, the agency is gone. She tracks Ana to a astery appropriated by the old Communists and novae mobsters trafficking in babies, both for profit and disposing of war crimes evidence. Anatema is at heart a mother's story and as such is wholly dependent on its lead actress. Unlike Richard Gere in Hunting Party, Lumnie Sopi is terrific as Ema. Unfortunately, many of the supporting actors are considerably weaker, although Blerim Gjoci is likeably credible as the sympathetic Kosovar Commander Shpati. Director Sopi truly takes the audience to occupied Kosovo, rightly forcing viewers to confront the reality of the war crimes committed there. However, he can be a bit heavy-handed, as when he shows a stampeding crowd trampling a baby's doll. Still, his portrayals of Serbian brutality and the clueless ness of the international policing forces are infuriatingly effective, all of which is ultimately held together by an impressive lead performance.

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