Zana (2019) Poster

(2019)

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8/10
Powerful portrayal of patriarchalism and wounds of war
arielshaban23 September 2019
Zana is a powerful film from Antoneta Kastrati, director whose films need to be followed. Few war inspired films nowadays are able to escape the unnecessary melodrama and a approach that basically forces the audiences into feeling sorry for the victims. Zana is not one of those films. Starting from masterful acting by the best of Kosovo's acting community, to an elaborate and powerful cinematography, and the haunting sound score, Zana feels like matured and precise filmmaking, which is surprising considering Zana is the first feature film by Kastrati. Using the Kosovo war as a backdrop to the story, Zana in essence speaks about the pressure of patriarchal values against the female protagonist. This is un-mistakenly a personal film for Kastrati, as she informs at the end credits that her mother and sister were victims of the Kosovo war. Her previous films, short and docs, all dealt directly and indirectly with effects of the conflict. Zana is a culmination of those efforts, professionally and masterfully put together by a wide team of talented professionals. Because it is personal, Kastrati, through the subtle yet emotional performance of Adriana Matoshi, puts us inside the head of the female protagonist. Other actors also very good at providing a picture and emotions of living a village life, with all the challenges, cries, laughter and every day monotony and suffering in a village struck by the devastation of a war. However, this is by far a personal story of the female protagonist, and the entire film and her world is viewed from her perspective entirely. In addition to being informative on personal effects of the Kosovo war, and how women continue to be perpetual victims of it to this day, Zana feels cathartic. I was honored to see the film in its premiere in Prishtina. The audience was shaken to the core, barely able to give an applause to the present film team afterwards. There were people crying and shaken in the corridors, a testament to the sincerity and strength of this film. The acting play of the local healer, played incredibly by one of the best actors in Kosovo is Mensur Safqiu is a performance worth of multiple awards and is timeless in its nature. Another aspect of the film is very personal and beautiful cinematography, which allowed actors to show their skills and haunting locations to show their strength. And finally, the sound and music composed (Albanian-German band Andrra) adds the necessary emotional layer to the film, without being "in your face" too much. All in all, Zana can be easily said to be the best and most powerful of Kosovo's cinema, putting Kastrati firmly into the generation who will lead the New Kosovo Cinema Wave. A must see film for everyone.
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6/10
sequels of war
dromasca5 December 2020
'Zana' (2019) directed by Antoneta Kastrati is the first film from Kosovo that I've ever seen. It is no surprise that the film deals with the wars in the Balkans at the end of the last century, among the consequences of which were the appearance of new states on the map of Europe, including Kosovo. However, the perspective from which the conflict is presented is different. The director, who lives in Los Angeles and has made several documentaries about that period, chose together with the screenwriters to describe the conflict indirectly, by presenting the traumas and psychological sequels of the conflict more than a decade after the events. It does so from the point of view of the victims and especially of the women who were in many cases the ones who suffered the most during the war and who continued to bear in silence the nightmares of the horrors they went through. The result is a special film, with a strong emotional impact, a testimony and a document made with the tools of fiction film.

The story takes place in a Muslim village at the intersection of the world of smartphones and YouTube applications, with the traditions that guide the lives of families and the community for centuries. Lume (Adriana Matoshi) is a woman approaching her 40s who carries the hard work duties in a rural economy and within a social order in which women seems to have many more obligations and far fewer rights to decide about their own lives than men. The trauma of the memory of her young daughter killed in the war a decade ago does not leave her, and the woman is finding it increasingly difficult to face the pressures of her husband Rem (Fatmire Sahiti) and mother-in-law (Astrit Kabashi) who want another child to be born. When modern medicine seems to be ineffective, the family presses her to turn to the advice of 'healers' - either the local ones in the village or the most famous ones, with television programs and fees of 500 euros. Modernity and tradition, the trauma of war and the attempt to preserve the cohesion of the family, all meet in conflict in the woman's life.

The whole film revolves around the character of the Lume, and Adriana Matoshi's acting is exceptional. The villager from Kosovo is fragile in soul but also dignified in her attempt to overcome her trauma and to face forces much stronger than her in a world where she is surrounded by hostility and indifference. Antoneta Kastrati's directorial conception, even if she fails to completely avoid the demonstrative rhetoric, combines it with elements of social criticism and careful observation of traditions in order to make the film cinematically interesting beyond the manifest message. The cinematography is also expressive, with moments of authentic beauty. The fantastic thread is less explored, the director being more concerned with the social dimensions of the phenomena of 'healers' and exorcism. This reminded me of another film from the Balkans, 'Beyond the Hills' by the Romanian Cristian Mungiu, where a similar theme was also approached in a realistic register. I liked less the way the characters around Lume were defined, I think there was room for more psychological depth especially in the characters of the heroine's husband and mother-in-law. 'Zana' is a film that adds to a gallery of productions that describes the conflicts and wars in the Balkans and their aftermath. In addition, it is a film with cinematic quality moments, a film worth seeing, and not only in the context of the message against violence of war and prejudice.
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9/10
Well-crafted, Enthralling Exploration of the Wounds of War
Blue-Grotto17 September 2019
Zana are mysterious beings from the forest who heal those who connect with them. Having lost a child in the recent war and haunted by nightmares of the experience, Lume is hesitant to bring another child into the world. Her husband and his mother put constant and extreme pressure on Lume to bear another child. They blame Lume and accuse her of being cursed. If only they or someone could help Lume with heartbreak.

Zana is dedicated to the mother and sisters the director lost in the war and drawn from Antoneta's own experiences. Antoneta also interviewed Albanian women whose experiences followed similar patterns. In exploring wounds of war Zana avoids the easy answers and the macho attitudes that make it harder for women to heal. Antoneta hopes to start conversations about the war and help women to talk about what they conceal inside. This is not the sole reason to see Zana, it is also a beautiful, jarring and well-crafted film. Though it is from a new director, actors, filmmakers and country, it is polished and enthralling. Seen at the Toronto international film festival.
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10/10
Speechless
ibrodeliofficial23 October 2019
Definitely the best albanian movie so far. I love it
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10/10
An intimate story beautifully tackling tough universal themes
rebitton28 November 2019
Zana weaves a tale set in the aftermath of the Kosovo war but transcends time, politics. and geography. It is a stunning portrayal of the depths and nuances of trauma and grief. The external constraints of an overtly patriarchal society serve as both a literal telling of a grieving woman's alienation and entrapment while also metaphorically capturing the inescapability of pervasive grief. It haunts and possesses its host. Lume, the protagonist in Zana, portrayed exquisitely by Adriana Matoshi, struggles to exist after unthinkable loss (no spoilers), but her real battle registers more so as a battle against others' expectations of her than her own inherent desire to "move on." She does not seek to move on. She does not seek to fully integrate in this new world that proceeds without her loved one. Anyone who has experienced loss can relate to this, the discomfort that others carry and project. Their well meaning wishes butting up against the rebellious longing to hold on, to preserve the relevance and value of the deceased. Zana uses culturally significant devices and context specific to Kosovo (witch doctors, animals, war) to render both an historically accurate depiction but also incredibly subtle metaphors that pack visceral punches. This is not a fast film, there are so many moments of noticing - stunning landscapes, skin texture, complex emotions dancing behind the eyes of the characters. Levity breaks through at just the right moments, as in real life, it's never all drama...survival requires and manufactures lightness and laughter. With Zana, her first feature length film, director Antoneta Kastrati is brave, not just in funneling her own personal loss into storytelling (she lost her mother and sister in the war), not just in trusting that a female protagonist's gut churning journey is enough to carry the film, but in allowing Lume to win in the most unexpected way and on her own terms.
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Amazing movie!
shpresim_kuqi23 October 2019
It is really an amazing movie probably the best ever from Kosovo. It totally deserves an Oscar nomination. Goog luck.
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1/10
Weird
ziadalkatil7 February 2022
Okay it's really sad about the war and everything else, but I really don't know how the hell did this movie got such rating as it's super normal?

The the movie is too long, and they can do it in 10 minutes maximum!

I'm still shocked regarding the rating, but maybe because its a true story.

In conclusion I don't recommend it, with all respect to the other opinions.
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10/10
Beautiful Touching Movie
cjaye1 September 2020
Beautiful touching movie exploring PTSD and the crimes that happened in Kosovo. Amazing performances by the lead and the man who played her husband, you can't help but feel for these characters. Makes you grateful and thankful if you are one who have never had to experience the crimes of war and understand what those who went through this time dealt with.
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10/10
Masterpiece!
albokrz8 September 2021
Heartbreaking movie! Nothing better than this Movies shows the postwar traumatic lives , mixed with tradition! The main Role , Lume , she plays in a perfect way! A solid 10/10!
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10/10
Breathtaking, Emotional, Sad, Mixed feelings
vhadri30 October 2019
It has been a month since I saw this movie, however I am still thinking about it. It gave me so many emotions, especially considering the fact that it represents a reality for many Kosovan families living in rural areas. The last scene made me cry, and I never cry!!!
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10/10
Psychological journey of war, but in peace
aureoli23 October 2019
This movie brilliantly deals with war traumas, but in a new, peaceful, environment. At least peaceful on the outside. You will definitely learn what it feels like to lose a child, by gun violence, in front of your eyes and being expected to live a normal live after that. You'll learn how this turns to what the villagers would describe as "black magic", and the doctors as hallucinations (etc.) because of severe PTSD. You'll get a reassurance that this could happen in real life, because it ACTUALLY IS based on real life events. You get to see how "witchcraft" only makes thing worse and how things could have gone better for the characters' lives, if psychiatrists were involved. You also get to see some albanian culture touch about the way albanian societies and families function, especially how they used to function immediately post-war. You also get to feel SO much emotion, just wait for the end...
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10/10
Best film ever ever ever
hana-radoniqi1 November 2020
I watch this film i'm obssesd hope to win all the festivals
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10/10
Very emotional movie portraying mother's anguish at loosing her child
fsherifi-5151021 December 2020
NEVER FORGET - a very sad and emotional story based on many real events during the Serbian ethnic cleansing of Kosova in 1999. The anguish still follow the many survivors who saw their beloved ones slaughtered by chauvinist Serbian Army and their paramilitaries. NEVER FORGET
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10/10
Best Movie out of Easter EU hands down!
timmehmeti23 October 2019
Goes to show that if you put your mind to it you you can accomplish anything. I was fortunate enough to be one of the very first people to see this film at TIFF. It's one of those movies that will keep you at the edge of the seat from begging to the end. Not your average movie / Story. It's touching, enlightening, exhilarating and most of all eye opening. Can't wait to get my hands on a copy of this film when it's out. Side note: It's so close to the truth it's hard to believe it's fiction.
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10/10
I'm curious to see this movie because they play a lot of great value artists
fitimramosaj22 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I'm curious to see this movie because they play a lot of great value artists.
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10/10
Beautiful work from everybody
nitaj_durim23 October 2019
It is one of the best portrayals of a country torn by war, people dealing with PTSD, Great job by the director and actors, and a story who is relatable with people from Kosovo.

10/10
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10/10
Breathtaking
uronnesatii23 October 2019
Amazing movie amazing cast I love everything about it!
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10/10
ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES THAT I'VE SEEN LATELY
pyfcqmx17 August 2022
The film itself deals with 2 of the most important topics in our Albanian families, the one of becoming parents with the great sacrifice that comes along and the trauma of losses during the war that people had to go thorugh and live through periods throughout their lives. DEFINITELY A 5 STAR MOVIE!
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10/10
Speechless
ardonika13 May 2021
Amazing movie, amazing cast, amazing story! Heartbroken at the end.
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10/10
Emotional
brikennad25 March 2021
Very heartfelt! Greatest Kosovo/Albanian movie made so far!
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10/10
Phenomenal!
hekuranbeluli23 October 2019
I got chills throughout the whole movie. So haunting! Adriana's acting was so captivating. The movie is phenomenal in every possible way.
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10/10
A beautiful movie from Kosovo
artimpllana23 October 2019
Zana A rare Kosovar movie so original and so good that it could be blended with Hollywood movies, Zana could be the best Albanian movie i have ever seen. A very touching, original story as well as possible in real history, Adriana's acting shows impressive and probably the best of her career. I hope the film is going to be nominated for an Oscar, because it really is that kind of movie. I was amazed at how Albanian(kosovars) have come to make such a deeply moving and touching film with so many parts of Horror. The final part of the movie was the best scene, emotionally touched the entire audience..
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10/10
Great!
kaltrinak23 October 2019
Beautiful and touching story. Great depiction of women and war trauma.
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10/10
Mother's love for baby
mirsaddibrani23 October 2019
The best film that so realistically describe the day-to-day life of a suffering mother and the genuine love for her child.
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10/10
100 % Authentic
bmiftari-4650319 December 2020
Never saw a movie like that, I learned a lot about trauma. Hope to see more from Antoneta Kastrati.
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