Manifesto
In a small European country, the king is scheduled to visit a small, quiet and "safe" village. It turns out that while the village may indeed be small, it's neither as quiet nor as safe as it's expected to be.
Dušan Makavejev
Dušan Makavejev
Casts & Crew
Camilla Søeberg
Alfred Molina
Simon Callow
Eric Stoltz
Gabrielle Anwar
Lindsay Duncan
Rade Šerbedžija
Svetozar Cvetković
Chris Haywood
Patrick Godfrey
Linda Marlowe
Ronald Lacey
Tanja Bošković
Enver Petrovci
Željko Duvnjak
Danko Ljuština
Rahela Ferari
Dani Segina
Tomislav Gotovac
Mirko Boman
Matko Raguž
Branko Blaće
Ivo Krištof
Marijan Habazin
Drew Kunin
Alan Anticevic
Svjetlana Grzelja
Siniša Cmrk
Also Directed by Dušan Makavejev
Collaborative film made in Denmark.
A Serbian engineer falls for a younger woman, but he is inept at courtship.
To Makavejev, each tombstone plays vicar for its resident spirit; it haunts, roams, and makes conversation.
Socialist work ethic meets youthful exuberance and lightheartedness where backbreaking labor does not ruin anyone's summer vacation.
A Red Army major caught between East and West Berlin finds his wife gone and somebody else moved into his apartment.
A documentary about the famous athlete and movie enthusiast who made Serbia's first sound film, Innocence Unprotected. The Nazi occupation of Belgrade prevented the film from gaining wider acclaim. Director Makavejev intersperses clips of the original film with interviews of surviving cast and crew members, as well as newsreel and archival footage.
Marilyn Jordan, an American, lives in Stockholm with her Swedish husband and family. Her behavior is bizarre, perhaps mad: she poisons the dog's milk and advises the dog not to drink it; she sets the sheets afire as her husband sleeps; she crawls under the dining table to sing. While detained at airport customs for carrying pruning shears, she meets a young Yugoslav woman and goes with her to a Gypsy enclave where she's fought over, takes a lover, helps with the sordid entertainment at a bar, and returns home more dangerous than before. The film also tells parallel stories of Marilyn's daughter becoming a junior homemaker as the young immigrant practices her striptease.
The winner of the Miss World Virginity contest marries, escapes from her masochistic husband and ends up involved in a world of debauchery.
Parade, one of Makavejev’s best-known films, is view into the preparations International Worker’s Day where the director all but ignores the titular parade. The film focuses on the people – those who work and those who wander the streets, sometimes lost among the throngs, shown in a by-the-way fashion and not without humor. Makavejev claims he sought to show, man as he is...
One camera in one setting, one attic and eight young directors – the result is a unique Dadaistic collage of seven short sketches. The original task for each filmmaker was to keep each short under three minutes, to set it in one hotel room, and to include the sentence “I miss Sonja Henie." This experimental film was shot over a single night at the international film festival FEST in Beograd in 1971.