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1-37 of 37
- VICE Serbia enters the Belgrade world of Fetish, Kink and BDSM.
- Since the late 2000's number of accidents in which Serbian bikers brutally die has been on a major rise, yet members of motorcycle clubs, illegal racers, adventure riders and those who lost loved ones keep riding, despite the danger.
- Deep into the heart of Bosnia and Herzegovina a tattooing tradition is preserved since the Ottoman Empire. It used to save lives and now exists as decoration on the skin of some of the last remaining guardians, the grandmothers.
- A documentary about unconventional artists from Serbia with an ecstatic reinterpretation of Contemporary Balkan Folk music and iconography.
- Sasa (Nebojsa Milovanovic) is a successful plastic surgeon. His office zen is broke by his loud nurse, Stojanka announcing the appearance of his cousin, Vule (Petar Strugar). Vule asks for a big favor - being a doctor himself, he asks to use Sasa's surgery just for one urgent case, and Sasa, emotionally blackmailed unwillingly accepts - not knowing that Vule is not an ordinary doctor - he is a veterinarian. Once inside, it will prove difficult for Sasa to get rid of his witty cousin.
- The world of free diving is reserved for only a few. In it, even the smallest mistake could be fatal.
- In the 1970s, Europe and America were shaken by the new musical genre of punk. The fury of the young generation was expressed through this uncompromising and extremely provocative musical fashion, and somehow shyly, some time before the death of Josip Broz Tito, punk rock reached the Yugoslav youth through some open door of the Communist Party. See how it all started in Belgrade in the movie - I was a punk before you. Zoran Kostic Cane, Cirilo, Slobodan Nesovic Loka, Srdjan Dragojevic, Srdjan Gojkovic Gile, Branko Rosic, Djole Rahaj, Beska, Nebojsa Pajkic and many other Belgrade punks of that time talk about the first days of punk in Yugoslavia.
- Young Serbian athletes fight against rough conditions in order to succeed in the unpopular kind of sport they have passionately dedicated themselves to.
- Fourty years of Enver Hoxha'a dictatorship brought Albania into a state of decades long isolation. In the 70s he conducted ideas spawned largely out of paranoia, with the weirdest one being the so called Bunkerisation Project. He built around 750 000 bunkers throughout the country, for a war that never happened. Today in one of the bunkers in North Albania, works a notorious tattoo artist, urban legend and ex-convict in America, who fled his home country right after the death of Enver Hoxha. He was deported back to Albania in 1997 and with him he brought the famous prison craft. In a scenery that reminds of Mad Max films is his bunker which he turned into a tattoo studio.
- An exploration of the obscure Goth/Stempunk/Cosplay community in Belgrade, Serbia
- Meet the People Who Ritualistically Suspend Bodies From Hooks.
- Vice Serbia's documentary short about Serbian art professor Vladislav Scepanovic 'Scepa' who has combined his two greatest loves, boxing and art, throughout his life.
- Angela is 23 years old. She lives with her mother who knows about her sexual orientation. She works in the Serbian government and is one of the authors of the famous "Kissing spot" in Belgrade.
- A biographical documentary about the true life and the real rap music of Smoki Mardeljano.
- In some parts of the Balkans, families still live by a centuries-old law called "the Canon," which recognizes the right to vengeance-if a man from one family kills another, the family of the victim must respond in kind. This "debt" is usually executed by the eldest male member of the family. It is his duty to avenge his loved one-if he refuses, he declared a coward and renounced by his family. From East Montenegro-where some families have experienced four cycles of vengeance-to the north of Albania, some children never leave their homes in fear of being killed. Families of murder victims, disappointed by the corruption of the official justice system, have taken judgment and punishment into their own hands.