| Index | 5 reviews in total |
10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Very enjoyable, 22 July 2002
Author:
Maksimilijan Bogosavljeviæ from Toronto, ON.
This film should be an example to young Serbian directors of today
(Raso Andricu, are you listening) on how to make a quality light,
youth-oriented movie.
"Nacionalna klasa" is basically about a young man's reluctance to grow
up. It stars Dragan Nikolic as Brana Mitrovic a.k.a. Floyd, a part-time
race car driver and full-time freeloader. He's 27, still living with
his parents and gives an impression of someone who hasn't put in too
many hard working days in his life. Movie follows him through 7 key
days of his life during which he:
- tries to weasel out of mandatory military service by faking a kidney
disease,
- frantically looks for money to buy new tires for his Zastava Fiat as
he's got a big race on the weekend,
- is informed by his girlfriend Vukosava a.k.a. Silja (Gorica Popovic)
with whom he maintains a very casual relationship that she's pregnant
with his kid and wants to break up, etc, etc...
Movie introduces a bunch of supporting characters too, of whom the most
memorable are Mile rent-a-bubreg (Bogdan Diklic) and an eternal film
student (played by Aleksandar Bercek) at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts
who seems to have it in for famous Spanish surrealist director Luis
Bunuel. The right ratio of comedy vs. poignancy is maintained
throughout, as to avoid the movie becoming either too frivolous or too
preachy.
Will our flawed hero finally become a responsible adult or will he
continue his womanizing, mooching and free-spending ways? Well, the
movie doesn't say since this is not the kind of major transformation
that happens over such a short period but by the end of the flick Floyd
definitely doesn't look a care-free guy he did in the beginning of it.
As an aside, it is interesting to watch mid-to-late 1970s Belgrade in
the background. This was a definite heyday of the communist,
foreign-loan-fueled la dolce vita in Yugoslavia. National basketball
team was winning European, World and Olympic titles, people were going
to Trieste, Italy on weekend shopping pilgrimages in search of
fashionable western merchandise and Goran Bregovic & 'Bijelo dugme'
were introducing the mass appeal of rock'n'roll to Yugoslav youth.
Unfortunately it didn't last, a slow but steady downhill ride commenced
soon afterwards, culminating in what the entire world saw play out in
the Balkans during the 1990s.
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
We laugh and cry at the same time in the Balkan, 1 June 2005
![]()
Author:
db07 from Macedonia
Being from Macedonia, a former Yugoslavian republic, I know that my perspective on this movie (and on the entire Yugoslavian cinematography )is slightly different from the perspective of a viewer that doesn't come from this part of the world. The environment in which the movie is located, the same environment that produced the director, the actors and the movie itself is very familiar to me.Perhaps that means that my views on this movie are biased, one sided and influenced by local traditions in film-making and life traditions in general.Nevertheless,in the next few lines I will express those views, because I really want to share with you, my friends, the pleasure that this movie brought to me. One more thing - people that don't speak Serbian can not experience the full flavor of the movie, for there is no translator that can transform the real meanings of some lines in the movie in any other languages. The movie itself is a bitter - sweet story of a free spirit a man can possess no matter how the society can try to put chains on him. Or vice-versa? How the society can put chains on a man , no matter how free spirited he is? Indeed, this idea of the authors is realized in a form of a brilliant con-texture of hilarious comical( satirical)scenes that honestly will make you roll on the flour laughing. There are characters in this movie that deserve to have special movies dedicated to them (as leads)- and I especially mean MILE- played by Gordan Diklic- a character that I would recommend to Adam Sandler, Chris Rock and Jim Carrey to gather one evening and watch and learn from. If there is a national cinematography that can paint humor on a movie screen while telling a sad or perhaps a tragic story( and this comes from a fan of the British black humor )it is the former Yugoslavian one.The strong artistic essence of the movie comes from the power of the entire crew did NOT CARE IF THE MOVIE WOULD BE A SUCCESS, meaning they did their job because they loved what they were doing.I guess that means that people in this part of the world and in this period of time had HEARTS, my friends, and I mean hearts the size of a mountain.The positive spirit is in the air all along the "ride" , even though we all know how the "ride" finished. Mixed emotions does indeed this film bring, but I guess we , the people of the Balkan, can laugh and cry at the same time. And it is not a easy thing to do, my friends. Watch the movie, experience one rich culture , one way of life that is so vivid in this movie. It can touch your soul.Really.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Blasé Belgrade of the late 1970s, 27 September 2005
![]()
Author:
milanpavlovic from United States
In an Oscar-worthy performance, Dragan Nikolic stars as Branimir
Mitrovic Floyd, a 27-year old race car driver of a Fiat 600
(affectionately known as the "Fica" in the former Yugoslavia), aspiring
to advance to the prestigious "National" racing class. Inspired in part
by the true-life story of Montenegrin film director Branko Baletic,
with an all-star cast also featuring the legendary Danilo Bata
Stojkovic, Olivera Markovic, Voja Brajovic, Irfan Mensur, Bogdan
Diklic, Rahela Ferari, Aleksandar Bercek, Gorica Popovic, and others,
"Nacionalna klasa" is easily among the top 10 movies ever made in
Serbia. We witness one week in the life of Branimir Mitrovic Floyd.
And what an exciting life it is! On a typical day, Floyd goes from one
adventure to the next, juggling a lot of things at once: he's trying to
sort out his relationship with his rich girlfriend Silja, who informs
him that she's pregnant and wants to break up with him; he's trying to
avoid a shotgun wedding, being forced on him by Silja's father, a
Communist Party apparatchik whom Floyd affectionately calls "cika Moma"
(uncle Moma); Floyd is also trying to dodge the draft, with a little
help from his shady buddy Papi and a new friend, the dorky but affable
Mile "rent-a-bubreg" (Mile rent-a-kidney). Floyd is constantly in
action. He's trying to hook up with Senka, a new fling he meets in the
halls of Belgrade University; raise money, with the help of his
colorful friend Simke, to buy new tires for his aging Fica for the last
race of the season; dodge a pesky pensioner, "comrade" Cabor, who
claims that Floyd hit his Skoda; and act as a matchmaker for his buddy
Zika, a first-rate mechanic who works on Floyd's Fica.
Floyd has made the best of a strained situation: he doesn't have much
money and lives with his parents, but that won't stop him from pursuing
his dream of becoming the champion of his racing class and having as
much fun along the way as possible. Floyd is in a class of his own.
After following Senka into a women's bathroom and being admonished by
her to leave ("Hey, get out! Some woman's gonna come in here and have a
stroke if she sees you."), he retorts with bravado and cool
self-confidence: "So what? Hey, do you want to get together later
tonight?" Inevitably, the question on every moviegoer's mind is: Will
Floyd win the crucial last race of the season? And will our somewhat
self-centered hero find a way out of his predicament?
While the movie accurately portrays the blasé atmosphere of Belgrade in
the late 1970s, it also provides a subtle criticism of Yugoslavia's
communist order by touching on social differences among the various
film protagonists. In contrast to common folk such as Floyd's dad (a
butcher), Zika (the car mechanic), and Senka (the aspiring college
student) -- all of whom struggle to make ends meet -- the Communist
Party apparatchik (uncle Moma) and his family are living it up in their
villa in the elite suburb of Dedinje. Uncle Moma's work consists of
writing position papers and attending Party meetings. And while
ordinary pensioners such as "comrade" Cabor and Floyd's great aunt
(tetka Nata) live quiet, unassuming lives, the all-powerful army
recruiter Vidoje barks at Floyd: "Don't call me 'uncle Rade', the fact
that your father and I are friends means nothing."
It's a shame that the film's director, Goran Markovic, never made a
sequel. I have often wondered about the destiny of our hero and the
other protagonists of this cult classic. What is Floyd up to, three
decades later? One fact is indisputable: for many future generations of
20-something urbanites in Serbia seeking adventure and fun, Branimir
Mitrovic Floyd will be quite an inspiration.
June 2007 update: In an interview published in the Belgrade daily
"Kurir" on June 19, 2007, Dragan Nikolic announced that a sequel may be
in the works after all. According to Nikolic: "The story would be
interesting to me not because I would play the lead role, but because
the plot would center around Floyd's son, who did not use his father's
experience in his own life. That's why he has the same problem that his
father had - he does not have a good car, yet he wants to be champion,
and he's asking himself, like I used to ask myself, can that be
accomplished without money? I spoke with Goran Markovic about a sequel,
and he is somewhere on the verge of starting to work on this story, if
he hasn't already started working on it in the meantime."
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
When disco ruled the world, 9 September 2006
![]()
Author:
Oggz from london UK
Despite the somewhat lame plot this has aged rather well - mostly due to good all round performances from some of the usual acting suspects of Serbian cinema, who were in this instance given credible dialogues to work with and were backed by a steady and competent direction by Goran Markovic. The film also takes a fab and unique snapshot of the city of Belgrade in the late seventies, when life and times suddenly became more affluent and marginally less constrained by the country politics. Fuelled by a feel good disco soundtrack (which helped launch the careers of the likes of Aleksandra Sladjana Milosevic and Oliver Mandic amongst others), the movie introduces (albeit diffidently) what is probably the first gay character in Serbian cinema, and delivers a heartfelt homage to a little car with a big soul that tends to break down a bit too often - the famous Fiat/Zastava 750, at the time the most popular car in the country - and the most affordable. An hour and a half of very enjoyable local movie nostalgia depicting some altogether more innocent times. And you can also boogie to the tunes.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Urban comedy with an ironical view of Belgrade society, 10 January 1999
![]()
Author:
dule9 from Belgrade, Serbia
A racer and his broken car, his no-good mechanic, his pregnant girlfriend, his gay friends, his assistant in double-crossing the military officials, are the basic ingredients of this sparkling comedy. There is also a variety of supporting characters, ranging from owner of Chech car who is prosecuting our hero on account of the car accident, to high politician who should fix a purchase of an expensive racing car as a wedding gift to the racer and his girlfriend who is politician`s daughter. Meanwhile, racer has to manage to avoid recruiting, since he can`t stand the army, and the wedding, since he can`t stand the marriage. Overall, one fine comedy with inevitable race in the end, which can win or lose everything for our hero.
| Plot summary | Ratings | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |