Enclave

March. 03,2015      
Rating:
7.5
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Nenad, ten years Christian boy from a Serbian enclave, determined to create a proper community burial for his late grandfather, crosses enemy lines and makes friends among the Muslim majority in deeply divided, war-torn Kosovo.

Miodrag Krivokapić as  Otac Draža
Denis Murić as  Baskim
Çun Lajçi as  Baškimov deda
Nebojša Glogovac as  Vojislav Arsić
Meto Jovanovski as  Milutin Arsić
Rastko Janković as  Italijanski vojnik 1
Anica Dobra as  Milica Arsić
Nenad Jezdić as  Vozač autobusa

Similar titles

2 or 3 Things I Know About Him
Prime Video
2 or 3 Things I Know About Him
What would your family reminiscences about dad sound like if he had been an early supporter of Hitler’s, a leader of the notorious SA and the Third Reich’s minister in charge of Slovakia, including its Final Solution? Executed as a war criminal in 1947, Hanns Ludin left behind a grieving widow and six young children, the youngest of whom became a filmmaker. It's a fascinating, maddening, sometimes even humorous look at what the director calls "a typical German story." (Film Forum)
2 or 3 Things I Know About Him 2005
The Crooked Way
The Crooked Way
A war veteran suffering from amnesia, returns to Los Angeles from a San Francisco veterans hospital hoping to learn who he is and discovers his criminal past.
The Crooked Way 1949
Behind Enemy Lines
Paramount+
Behind Enemy Lines
While flying a routine reconnaissance mission over Bosnia, fighter pilot Lt. Chris Burnett photographs something he wasn't supposed to see and gets shot down behind enemy lines, where he must outrun an army led by a ruthless Serbian general. With time running out and a deadly tracker on his trail, Burnett's commanding officer, Admiral Reigart, decides to risk his career and launch a renegade rescue mission to save his life.
Behind Enemy Lines 2001
Tommy
Tommy
A psychosomatically deaf, dumb and blind boy becomes a master pinball player and the object of a religious cult.
Tommy 1975
The Kolaborator
The Kolaborator
During the conflict in the former Yugoslavia many soldiers were convinced to kill fellow citizens including friends and relatives in the name of patriotism. The Kolaborator follows the story of Goran, 24, a promising young soccer player who is forced to become a soldier. Goran goes from being a talented athlete to an executioner virtually overnight. Following orders, Goran lines up civilians, shoots them and drags them into mass graves. Justifying his role as a protector of his people, Goran becomes increasingly detached from the task until his soccer coach and life-long friend, Asim, is led in front of him. As a familiar face stands defeated before him, Goran must reconsider his actions and choose between his own life and that of his dear friend.
The Kolaborator 2007
Before the Rain
Before the Rain
The circularity of violence seen in a story that circles on itself. In Macedonia, during the war in Bosnia, Christians hunt an ethnic Albanian girl who may have murdered one of their own. A young monk who's taken a vow of silence offers her protection. In London, a photographic editor who's pregnant needs to talk it out with her estranged husband and chooses a toney restaurant.
Before the Rain 1994
The Woman with the Torch : Elsie Inglis's War
The Woman with the Torch : Elsie Inglis's War
Elsie Inglis and the work of the Scottish Women's Hospitals (SWH) are captivating. Elsie and the other women did not conform to the stereotype of women in war. They were operating close to the fighting on both the Western Front and in the Balkans. Also, the SWH's were run entirely and predominantly staffed by women. This meant that there were not only women doctors, rare enough in the early twentieth century but like Elsie, women surgeons.
The Woman with the Torch : Elsie Inglis's War 1

You May Also Like

Indignation
Prime Video
Indignation
In 1951, Marcus Messner, a working-class Jewish student from New Jersey, attends a small Ohio college, where he struggles with anti-Semitism, sexual repression, and the ongoing Korean War.
Indignation 2016
Pitfall
Prime Video
Pitfall
An insurance man wishing for a more exciting life becomes wrapped up in the affairs of an imprisoned embezzler, his model girlfriend, and a violent private investigator.
Pitfall 1948
Emma.
Max
Emma.
In 1800s England, a well-meaning but selfish young woman meddles in the love lives of her friends.
Emma. 2020
The Conjuring 2
Max
The Conjuring 2
Lorraine and Ed Warren travel to north London to help a single mother raising four children alone in a house plagued by malicious spirits.
The Conjuring 2 2016
1917
Paramount+
1917
At the height of the First World War, two young British soldiers must cross enemy territory and deliver a message that will stop a deadly attack on hundreds of soldiers.
1917 2019
Inception
Prime Video
Inception
Cobb, a skilled thief who commits corporate espionage by infiltrating the subconscious of his targets is offered a chance to regain his old life as payment for a task considered to be impossible: "inception", the implantation of another person's idea into a target's subconscious.
Inception 2010
Interstellar
Prime Video
Interstellar
The adventures of a group of explorers who make use of a newly discovered wormhole to surpass the limitations on human space travel and conquer the vast distances involved in an interstellar voyage.
Interstellar 2014
Knives Out
Prime Video
Knives Out
When renowned crime novelist Harlan Thrombey is found dead at his estate just after his 85th birthday, the inquisitive and debonair Detective Benoit Blanc is mysteriously enlisted to investigate. From Harlan's dysfunctional family to his devoted staff, Blanc sifts through a web of red herrings and self-serving lies to uncover the truth behind Harlan's untimely death.
Knives Out 2019
Guardians of the Galaxy
Starz
Guardians of the Galaxy
Light years from Earth, 26 years after being abducted, Peter Quill finds himself the prime target of a manhunt after discovering an orb wanted by Ronan the Accuser.
Guardians of the Galaxy 2014
Lucy
Max
Lucy
A woman, accidentally caught in a dark deal, turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic.
Lucy 2014

Reviews

GamerTab
2015/03/03

That was an excellent one.

... more
Protraph
2015/03/04

Lack of good storyline.

... more
Stevecorp
2015/03/05

Don't listen to the negative reviews

... more
Philippa
2015/03/06

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

... more
maurice yacowar
2015/03/07

Goran Radovanovic pulls Enclave toward an inexorably tragic conclusion but pulls back to find redemption. Three characters find redemption. The Serbian boy Nenad survives near-death — buried under the new church bell in a burning tower — to make a new life in the multicultural Belgrade. His father Milena comes in from the embittered alcoholic's cold to help his son make that new life. The vengeful Albanian shepherd Baskim finds a conscience just in time to save Nenad's life.If the isolated, fragile Christian church bell tower expresses the vulnerability of that ethnic minority in Kosovo, four years after the war, Baskim's role as shepherd carries both Christian and poetic connotations. The shepherd is traditionally the figure of pastoral innocence and purity, but here the Serbs' murder of his father has turned him into a violent malevolence. The shepherd is also Jesus, of course, so Baskim and the church bell frame the climax in Christian terms. The film details the tensions between the Albanian community and the small Serbian enclave that barely survives in the antagonistic ethos. Armoured tanks convey the citizens between the two zones' borders. The boys are raised into their fathers' war, until Nenad's hunger for friendship — any friendship, even with the Albanian toughs — draws him into the Albanian "society" and Baskim discovers the error of his anger.Writer/director Radovanovic himself plays the Serb who joins the Albanian multi-ethnic police force, placing the larger peace-keeping role ahead if his ethnic identity. His conversion is not guilt-free. That compromise Milena spurns on principle. But the ethic of the film promotes the suspension of ethnic wars in favour of rediscovering our common brotherhood. Hence the Christian framework.The happy ending is not a sell-out. Rather, it points a way out of the self-perpetuating rage and murders that poison and destroy the idealists in any civil war. This story of redemption is more constructive than the tragic conclusion would have been. The grandfathers are dying or unchangeable, the fathers are disillusioned and impotent, so to the children fall the need and hopes for peace. Hence the interweaving of the Serbian grandfather's death and funeral with the Albanian's supervision of his grandson's wedding. The cycle of community trumps the cycle of violence.

... more
princip-851-26815
2015/03/08

CHILDREN ARE WATCHING USAbout the narrative in the feature film "The Enclave" by Goran RadovanovićThe surreal daily life of the Serbian civilians in the rare enclaves in present-day Kosovo can potentially represent an extraordinarily inspiring theme for filmmakers. Despite that, with the exception of several courageous documentary reports (recorded immediately after the arrival of KFOR and the first pogroms against Serbs in the southern province in 1999 and 2000) - so far only Sonja Blagojević, in her feature-length documentary Kosma filmed in 2013, tackled the complicated task of covering this topic in a concrete, feature film form. Goran Radovanović goes back to this issue in an entirely different form of a feature film with his The Enclave resulting from a Serb-German co-production, and completed in 2014. The boy who observes daily his homeland through the oblong little window of a KFOR armored personnel carrier that Italian troops drive him in to and from school; the deserted Serbian school attended by just one pupil, which definitely closes down when the last remaining teacher leaves; the constant feeling of anxiety and danger that the remaining, rare Serbs - tracked by the cross-hairs of automatic weapons - have grown accustomed to, just as they have to the air they breathe, are all motifs taken from the painful reality that the author skillfully blends into a unique and rounded narrative of his feature film. From compelling, factual scenes of everyday life reactivated archaic forms stand out, two ritually and mythically founded motives which also constitute the backbone of the plot and the background for the culmination and the denouement of Radovanović's film: the death and the burial of the oldest member of the Serbian household, and the engagement and the wedding in a neighboring Albanian home. Still, key momentum to the plot is given by the motive of the need sensed by the lonely Serb boy (played by Filip Šubarić) to play with his Albanian peers (Denis Murić, Nenad Stanojković and Milan Sekulić). It's an unusual game: dangerous and full of mistrust, but soon enough harmless too; a game between enemies, guided by specters of the past which occasionally allows - thorough children's oblivion for reality, to tear down barriers of centuries old intolerance and carefully cultivated hatred. Their relationship, evolving in the playing field unfenced by crude reality, reflects in a weird, twisted way the rapport of their parents and of the feuding ethnic groups. In the constant and dizzying ambiguity of the game, the narrative resists the temptation to slip into non-reality of fairy tales, or into cheap and pathetic "politically correct" propaganda on coexistence and tolerance. In the critical moment, the legacy of hatred and traumas from the recent past will still burst out from the playful boys - and after this dramatic culmination, The Enclave is resolved through a non-linear, skipping and mosaic, fully unconventional narrative which harbors the greatest value and the salient feature of Radovanović's new film. With a precise as well as unusual and unpredictable combination of parallel editing with flash-forwards and deliberate omission of important segments of the plot, the author compiles - with the great help of the editor Andrija Zafranović (whose contribution to this film exceeds by far the usual professional parameters) - the entirety using an approach and a form of narration typical of artistic films. Because the effect of the chosen non-linear, elliptical and leaping storytelling in the final third of The Enclave is not used up just in the stressed tension and drama in the suggestiveness of scenes that amplify the empathy of the viewers with the drama of the protagonist, the ten-year-old boy Nenad. Along with the emphasized catharsis, this approach also brings, in the film finale, undeniable poetic qualities, unusualness and revived secrecy of reality that emerges from the decomposed infantile experience of the adult world. David Lynch lucidly noted in an interview that childhood is a sort of drunkenness and ontological intoxication with the world and life, and The Enclave discretely gives us back that experience, suggesting it with its very structure, and thoughtfully selected and executed storytelling strategy.Srdjan Vučinić

... more
djokovic75
2015/03/09

I don't write reviews. Don't know why anyone read reviews anyway, it would be smarter just to go and watch whatever you think its interesting for you to watch. But for this movie, I have to say something.I'm from Kosovo. Born and raised there. And I very well know the whole situation, and movie has been placed well. Everything that you see is true - all the pain and suffering of a little Serbian boy, all the bad treatment of his father, the Serbian Albanian relationship, corrupt police, very cynical international police, everything is right, correct and in place, not at all exaggerated, its even worse, if you ask me.But, I have to state some critics as well (but it will not matter for you if you ex-pat and not from Kosovo):1. It's not possible that father and son have two different accents. They are not extremely different, but they are different, and thats were director failed, and where main actor who's really good actor, but born in Bosnia and Hercegovina and raised in Belgrade, in which accent is really different (difference between the accents of Kosova and Belgrade is something like being from Bristol and Leeds, or even better -Newcastle)) failed as well.2. There are many holes in the script, but just to mention big one - it doesn't matter that their grandmother was Serbian but no 10year old Albanian kid would ever know how to speak Serbian in 2004 (or later)I'll stop here. Would like to mention once again that all the minuses are not relevant if you are foreigner, but they are visible for someone who's from Kosovo.Anyway, please watch the movie, its worth watching.

... more
petar-simic8
2015/03/10

Enklava is a great movie which very realistically shows the life on Kosovo,province of Serbia.It doesn't stand on neither side,nor Serbian,nor Albanian.It just shows the rough life that it is.Great performance from one of the best Serbian actors Nebojsa Glogovac.Very lovable roles of a Serbian and the Albanian boys.Anica Dobra has a good performance as Vojas(Glogovac) sister who fled to Belgrade.The end is very heartbreaking as it shows young boy Nenad who moved to Belgrade and his first day in new school and the children who make jokes of him and don't understand what he has been through.Movie is very deep and moving,it really makes you think about all the benefits of your life and the horror of war.

... more