12. - 14. October 1999
22.00

The Icon of Rebellion

If it is true that each era and
each society has such heroes and icons as it produces and, after all, deserves,
then there is no doubt that Sonja Savić is one of those artistic figures that
help us better and more completely understand the diversified, exciting and,
unfortunately, final phase in the film history of former Yugoslavia. For it was
precisely during the eighties, that the remarkable and fascinating career of
this actress was flourishing and reached its acme, to be transformed later into
a paradigmatic, qualitative and quantitative phenomenon capable of defining by
itself most of the vital characteristics of the period and milieu from which it
sprang up and to which it belonged.The first and probably the only genuine film
star of the era after Tito and before the collapse of former Yugoslavia, Sonja
Savić designedly based her media charisma on the most progressive and, as it
turned out later, mainly utopian beliefs and aspirations of Yugoslav society in
the eighties. In a series of impressive and totally different roles in terms of
their genre, style and character, this bold, determined, imaginative,
uncompromising and often unadjustable actress gave the Yugoslav audience what
it had never had before: the figure of an authentic and uncompromising rebel.
For, despite her partisan, self-management and film-noir predecessors asserting
that they wished to and could do more, the web of social and historical
circumstances was irrevocably on her side, permitting her repeatedly to warn a
dominantly conservative and traditional environment of the necessity of a
human, civil and artistic rebellion.
The bitter realities of the time
soon devalued and denied not only the commitment and proclaimed goals of Sonja
Savić, but all the essential attributes of the society, state and
cinematography on the foundations of which the specifics of her identity as an
actress had been built. Faced with the new political and cinematic order in her
country during the nineties, and having lost some of her former enthusiasm and
creative freedom, the actress stoically endured both a lack of work and a
certain marginalisation of her previous work, channelling her unrestrainable
energy to other media and technologies and to other artistic programmes and
concepts as well. In the process of maturing as an artist, Sonja Savić has
obviously realised that commercial films are not the ideal tool of a revolution
of the mind, but this bitter and slightly delayed revelation has nevertheless
left the momentum of her private rebellion unimpaired.
Aleksandar D. Kostić

Program SONJA SAVIC


Wednesday, 13. oct., 6pm
: Living like the rest of us - dir. Milos
Radivojevic, 1982.
Thursday, 14. oct., 6pm: Sugar Water - dir. Svetislav Bata Prelic,
1983.
Thursday, 14. oct., 10pm: The Strangler - dir. Slobodan Sijan, 1984.

Friday, 15. oct., 5pm: Una - dir. Miloš Radivojevic, 1984.
Friday, 15 oct., 7pm: Recent videowork by Sonja Savic. Followed by a
discussion with Sonja Savic, Aleksandar D. Kostic and Maja Weiss. Moderator:
Katarina Pejovic.

In collaboration with: Slovenska kinoteka

 

Artists and collaborators
Sonja Savić

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