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Who’s Singin’ Over There? 1980 123movies

Who’s Singin’ Over There? 1980 123movies

Oct. 23, 198086 Min.
Your rating: 0
5 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Ко то тамо пева? 1980 123movies, Full Movie Online – On April 5, 1941, a date Serbs will recognize, men on a country road board Krstic’s bus for Belgrade: two Gypsies who occasionally sing about misery, an aging war vet, a Nazi sympathizer, a dapper singer, a consumptive, and a man with a shotgun. Krstic is a world-weary cynic, out for a buck; the driver is his son, the simple, cheerful Misko. En route they pick up a priest and young newlyweds going to the seaside. Along the way, mis-adventure strikes: a flat tire, a rickety bridge, a farmer who’s plowed the road, a funeral, two feuding families, an army detail, and a lost wallet slow the bus and expose rifts among the travelers. On April 6, amid rumors of war, they reach Belgrade….
Plot: On April 5th, 1941, a day before the Nazi attack on the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a colorful group of passengers is headed for Belgrade…
Smart Tags: #road_trip #sex_scene #female_nudity #year_1941 #yugoslavia #singing #long_take #coughing #tuberculosis #bus_stop #bus_driver #bus_trip #cross_country_bus_trip #running_after_a_bus #couple #sex_in_public #hearse #rabbit #army #soldier #lost_wallet


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Ratings:

8.8/10 Votes: 15,636
N/A | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 119 Popularity: 6.37 | TMDB

Reviews:


Ko to tamo peva? is one of Yugoslavia’s film classics. It was shot and released in 1980, but it looks back to a tragic era in the country’s history: the opening titles announce that what we will see takes place on 5 April 1941, a date that any Yugoslav at this time would recognize as the day before the German invasion. In a non-descript countryside, a bus stops for a motley crew of passengers all headed for Belgrade. They include a grizzled old WWI veteran (Milivoje “Mića” Tomic), a dandy hoping to audition at a caberet (Dragan Nikolic), a germanophile who may well be a spy (Bata Stojković), and a newlywed couple (Slavko Stimac, Neda Arneric). Also on board are two gypsies (Miodrag and Nenad Kostić) who periodically comment on the action in funny musical interludes. Driving the bus is cranky and sly old man Kstic (Pavle Vuisic) and his manchild son Misko (Aleksandar Bercek).

So much of the Yugoslav cinema tradition up to this point had consisted of state-approved World War II films repeatedly underscoring how the brave Yugoslav Partisans beat the Germans through every patriotic Yugoslav banding together regardless of their backgrounds and differences. Ko to tamo peva? upsets this tradition, depicting its cast as a squabbling bunch of cantankerous, greedy, and venial types, every man for himself. Yet, in spite of their dislike for one another, the Serb passengers manage to join together at least to beat up the gypsies. (This is a grim counterpart of the old joke popular in the USSR that “friendship of peoples” — one of the values proclaimed by the Communist Party — refers to when e.g. Russians and Georgians join together to beat up some third ethnicity.)

As the bus makes its way to the big city, the passengers encounter a series of absurd obstacles a la William Faulkner’s novel As I Lay Dying: a funeral, the bus driver’s impromptu barbecue, and the Yugoslav army detaining them as suspected spies. It seems like they will never reach Belgrade. But when they do finally make it to the capital, the audience has a surprise in store.

The extremely high rating given to this film is mainly due to Serbs and other former Yugoslavs gushing about a beloved classic, perhaps more than it deserves. For viewers outside Yugoslavia, few are likely to get all the references and humour, and so one will probably be so impressed as those reviewers giving this a perfect 10. Still, Ko to tamo peva? may be worth seeing for cinephiles abroad. Much of the comedy does come through. Furthermore, the work of the former Yugoslavia’s most internationally acclaimed filmmaker, Emir Kusturica, riffs on some of the gags here. Indeed, the screenplay for this film was written by Dusan Kovacevic, who would eventually collaborate with Kusturica on Underground, and Ko to tamo peva? presents a similar view of the Balkan mentality as a lot of riotous eating, drinking, and dancing as in Kusturica’s films.

Review By: CRCulver

An old bus, owned by “Krstic & son” is heading from unnamed province to the capital Belgrade, just one day before Nazis attacked Yugoslavia in april 1941.
The writer Dusan Kovacevic stated that this story was inspired by true events and real people. They all had their reasons why they needed to get to Belgrade as soon as possible, not knowing that their destiny was uncertain.
And their stories and characters get twisted together in a series of events that make you laugh in disbelief.
This comedy and drama is so popular in all of ex Yugoslavia, that even young people know the most of dialogs from this movie by heart. They have become the part of the popular culture. Dusan Kovacevic manages to make those characters so real and alive. The cast is the first class, all of the actors come from the best theaters in the country.
No use to tell the story and spoil the joy of watching. Just to tell how good it is: the play is staged in theaters around the country for more than 30 years!

I will not waste time trying to explain technical details, photography, etc. since I am not an expert for that. When one watches the movie, all it matters is do you get bored during the show at any point? Not with this one! And the feeling you get after: do you get excited? Do you want to watch it again? Oh, yes!
It is funny, interesting, it makes you laugh, it makes you cry. You will see that different cultures are not so different and that destiny can play tricks with everyone and everywhere.

If you’ve seen “The Marathon Family” or “The Balkan Spy” and you liked it, know that this one comes from the same kitchen so it will taste great.

Review By: dotokija
Wonderful film, a pity I cannot get a copy of it to watch again
“Ko to tamo peva” is one of the best films I ever saw. A tragicomedy with very deep implications on the fate of humankind shown through the eyes of seemingly very plain and common people from a God-forsaken Serbian province just before the start of the World War II. I saw it in a small movie theater in Russia where the film had had a very limited distribution, and I had no chance to come across it ever since. It is such a pity that this excellent film is almost forgotten now. I searched for a VHS or DVD copy of it many times, and alas – could find none. I would be most grateful to other fans of this little gem of movie-making for a suggestion of the ways to purchase a copy.
Review By: AS_Spb
The Most Realistic Comedy of All Time
If you like “tragicomedies” and dramas within comedies, then this film is just made for you. The portrayal of all the characters is stereotypical to every detail and line. How to turn boring and unattractive everyday Serbian life and landscape of Serbia at the time of II. world war to what it came out on the film is spectacular. Even though, most actors were well known and respected in former Yugoslavia and beyond, their parts in this film were re-emerging for them. There are a few times you can easily forget that they are in fact, acting, they are that good! To give this amazing cast that screenplay and a great director, you know you are making a hit. The storyline is beyond the wildest imagination. When you stop laughing because of one scene, there is another one unexpectedly kicking right in again. It all comes clear at the end, but don’t miss even a second of the film or you will regret doing so. Considering hard life in Serbia, films there have similar stories, but each and every one of them is told differently through every film. I can’t forget the amazing (!!!) soundtrack that follows every “breaking point” in the film. Well thought through in every aspect, this film can easily be one of the best dark comedies of all time and surely one of the best Yugoslavian films in history.

// There are so many more great similar Yugoslavian black comedies you should check out, like: Maratonci trce pocasni krug (1982), Balkanski spijun (1984, … //

Review By: matic-paska

Other Information:

Original Title Ко то тамо пева?
Release Date 1980-10-23
Release Year 1980

Original Language sh
Runtime 1 hr 26 min (86 min) (Canada)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated N/A
Genre Adventure, Comedy, Drama
Director Slobodan Sijan
Writer Dusan Kovacevic
Actors Pavle Vuisic, Dragan Nikolic, Danilo ‘Bata’ Stojkovic
Country Yugoslavia
Awards 5 wins & 1 nomination
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Mono
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Who’s Singin’ Over There? 1980 123movies
Who’s Singin’ Over There? 1980 123movies
Original title Ко то тамо пева?
TMDb Rating 7.6 119 votes

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