(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
David Hudson, IFC.com
Kusturica's films are known for their unconventional narrative organization. Focusing on a family of Bosnian Serbs Luka (Slavko Stimac), an engineer, his wife Jadranka (Vesna Trivalic), an opera singer, and their son Milos (Vuk Kostic), an aspiring soccer player the filmmaker is again less interested in the dramaturgical structure of the narrative than the honest, uncompromising portrayal of his heroes. With the crisis approaching, a regional party leader is murdered during a forest hunt, and the news from Sarajevo and Belgrade grows increasingly more disturbing. However, the locals continue with their everyday life, hoping that the chaos and bloodshed may somehow be averted. Luka is projecting a tunnel that would promote the region as a tourist destination, Jadranka still dreams of a grand career in opera, and Milos is awaiting a call up by the Partizan Belgrade Football Club. Nevertheless, the unfolding of the civil war decimates the family. Milos is conscripted and Jadranka runs away with a musician. When he receives the news of Milos's captivity, Luka's world seems to be falling apart until he becomes the guardian of a young girl, Sabaha (Natasa Solak), a Muslim hostage waiting to be exchanged for his son.
One of the most persistent leitmotifs in chronicling and interpreting the war in the former Yugoslavia is the understanding of the Balkan conflict as a clash between the urban (presumably "civilised") and rural (presumably "uncivilised") society. This view draws inspiration from the brutal, medieval-style sieges of Sarajevo, Dubrovnik, Vukovar, Gorazde and other cities that marked the 1990s and resulted in the horrific atrocities against the civilian population. The savage, myopic, "pre-modern" violence is often attributed to the atavistic hatred of the rural population towards urbane lifestyle and "decadence" the setting and climate that challenged the core postulates of the patriarchal order.
Marx rarely writes about Nature, observing it merely as a force to be conquered by the advent of human progress and the constantly evolving means of production. In accordance with his teaching, the architects of Yugoslav socialism with a "human face" identified the emerging working class as the agent of progress and social change. The films of Petrovic, Pavlovic and Makavejev suggest that the sweeping transformation of an agrarian society and culture into a semi-industrialised socialist economy resulted in a crisis of identity with significant repercussions on the lives of their protagonists. This is first and foremost epitomised in their characters' loss of proximity to Nature. The petty thieves and suburban anti-heroes in Pavlovic's When I am Dead and Gone (1967) and Petrovic's I Even Met Happy Gypsies (1967), and local bureaucrats in Makavejev's Love Affair (1967) are all victims of post-war industrialisation and exodus to expanding urban areas. Confused and disorientated, they struggle to comprehend the bewildering party decrees of revolutionary achievements and industrial progress. Poverty-stricken, trapped in bizarre, uninspiring jobs and transitory relationships in an urban squalor bereft of purpose or transcendence, they resort to alcohol, criminality, and violence, trying to resolve their predicaments and assuage their disappointments.
Marko, a disillusioned party veteran, betrays his country during the 1990s civil war. A wheelchair-bound arms smuggler, he dies at a nameless village on the frontline, doused in petrol. Blacky, who remains loyal to the ideals of the revolution, joins the war, but finds it unsettling and confounding. Moreover, he is forced to explain to his grown son the difference between the Sun and the Moon, a deer and a horse. After a lifetime spent in a cellar, detached from the world of Nature and brainwashed by their fanatical parents, the "children of the revolution" are unprepared to face the challenges of the outside world. It is not surprising that, in the final scene of Underground, amidst the festive atmosphere, while a small island drifts away from the mainland carrying the revelers, Ivan (Slavko Stimac) addresses the audience speaking directly into the camera and evokes a pastoral fantasy, a settlement of landless, dispossessed people, building new houses, living and working on the land, determined to recreate their long-lost homeland. Using what Peter Handke once described as "the gentle authority of the narrator of a fairy-tale,"2 Ivan ends his monologue with the opening words of another tale: "Once there was a country…"
Kusturica's film abounds with visual puns. The filmmaker discovers that even the most humble elements in nature may take on the stature of protagonists. As the whole region sinks towards tragedy, Vujan's (Obrad Dujovic) enamoured and suicidal donkey blocks the rail tracks through the dangerous mountain passes, showing that love is perhaps worth dying for. While trains and tracks emerge as a poetic homage to Pavlovic, Kusturica stays away from the urban nightmare of polluted suburbia and squalid station bistros. Cut off from the surrounding mayhem, Luka and Sabaha seek transcendence in the world of pastoral simplicity, listening to Vujan's lyrical reminiscences of his first love. They are shown as a couple with the capacity to realise the fundamental ideals of humanism, love, tolerance, and ability to understand, badly needed during the time of chaos and crisis. When Sabaha admits that she comes from an ordinary family and is not a daughter of a local Bosnian Muslim leader, Luka realises that the exchange plan may be all but over. Nevertheless, armed with hope and secluded from the rest of the world, they continue their relationship, confident that the seemingly impossible situation may somehow be resolved. The world of Nature, the Brueghellian pastures and paddocks of Bosnian hills, which persistently appear in their dreams, emerges as an ally of ostensibly doomed lovers. Even when Sabaha is wounded in a surprise attack, the couple escapes to security through the snow-covered landscape of the Bosnian mountains.

1. Kusturica in an interview with Vesna Milivojevic, "Ovde nema mesta za bogate dripce," in Glas javnosti, glas-javnosti.co.yu/arhiva/2004/09/25.
2. Peter Handke, A Journey to the Rivers: Justice for Serbia. Translated by Scott Abbott. New York: Viking, 1997, p.8
3. Following the prisoners' exchange, Milos walks with his father towards the Serbian side of the bridge. An American journalist approaches them and asks a question about the exchange. Milos burps into her face. Kusturica has been highly critical of the role of the "democratic" West in the events in the Balkans. As the filmmaker pointed out in his recent interview: "I remember reading in the New York Times in 1990 that the civil war in Yugoslavia was about to start. I thought, if they know it's about to start, why don't they stop it, fuckers?" Kusturica, in an interview with Stojan Cerovic, in Vreme 718, "Nikad necu biti kul."






