

Three Yugoslav rebels made a film so bleak it got buried for decades. Ready?
A three-part omnibus consisting of Kino Klub amateurs' work: Zivojin Pavlovic's dialogue-free "Live Waters" set in 1943, Marko Babac's "Warriors" about psychological look at the two patients in a hospital room, as well as Kokan Rakonjac's "Raindrops" about alcoholic's decaying relationship with his girlfriend.
Cinematography
Swampy 16mm textures that reek of mud and despair
Direction
Three distinct visions, one unified hopelessness

Director
Marko Babac
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The Kino Klub movement let factory workers and students shoot on weekends; this was their only theatrical release as a trio.
Banned from export because Western audiences 'wouldn't understand Yugoslav suffering'—as if misery needs a passport.
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