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Virtual Macedonia Bookstore - Loving Glances

Loving Glances
List Price: $9.99
Our Price: $5.74
Your Save: $ 4.25 ( 43% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Tla
Starring: Milena Dravic, Branko Cvejic, Boris Komnenic, Gorica Popovic, Matija Prskalo
Directed By: Srdjan Karanovic
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0807839001280
Format: Closed-captioned
Label: Tla
Manufacturer: Tla
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Tla
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2004-12-21
Running Time: 97
Studio: Tla
Theatrical Release Date: 2003

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Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Ivana Bolanca is definitely easy on the eyes
Comment: This is (what some would consider) a "chick flick"--and I wouldn't disagree. I don't ordinarily go for this type of romantic comedy, but the time and setting (mid '90s post-war Belgrade) and the fact the story deals with
a couple of refugees trying (in their own way) to get by and find a bit of happiness, some normalcy in their existance, makes it the exception. And, of course, there is the truly gorgeous Ivana Bolanca. The lady is sexy and sweet and charismatic--without ever being in your face about it, unlike so many celebrity females running around out there today who act like they're god's gift to men--and are far from it.

I dug this feel-good flick & can only hope that Ivana's career takes off and she continues to do good work.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Loving Glances Backwards And Forwards
Comment: I can't say I really liked this film, but at the same time I can encourage others who are curious about it to rent it. It is the story of a young man and woman who are looking for each other, and who are developing other romantic relationships at the same time.

The type of comedy in this film did not often make me laugh, but the film might be very funny to other people. The movie's storytelling device of adding new spirits (people from the main character's pasts) as literal observers to their travels is interesting, but (for me) became overused, cumbersome, and contrived (imagine a Shakespeare play with 5 or 6 Falstaff-like men and women regularly commenting about each move made by Romeo & Juliet). There's a time and place for wit, but it's arguably overbearing here. But my critique may be misplaced, given that the intent of this film is to be a comedy about the luggage we all carry forward with us from the people we have been close to in our pasts.

But the ending scenes in this film are excellent. They are strong, poignant, and hopeful. The movie deals with the nearly universal issue of choosing spouses while still loving significant others from our past. And on those notes, it appears to speak with practical experience, wisdom, and loving consideration.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: sweet and positive
Comment: This touching Serbian film deftly portrays the tragedy and confusion of the post-war Balkans, and does so with unfailing lightness and humor.

Belgrade, in the late 90's, became the refuge of a cascade of displaced persons, like handsome young Labud (swan) and Romana. They have enlisted the services of a match-maker to help them find companions.

The story is an old one - how the young couple find, lose, and ultimately keep one another - so the charm and interest of the film comes principally from the surrounding details. Labud, alone and living in a shelter, fantasizes about people from his past and has imaginary conversations with them. Among those who populate and direct his thoughts are his former fiancee (she emigrated to Chicago when war broke out), his mother, 'professor', various ancestors. Romana has her past with her, too, including her father, sister, and first love. It is a very busy film, therefore, especially when you consider all the eccentrics that also haunt the dating service.

There is much sentiment, but never a moment of sentimentality - especially surprising when one considers the loss that pervades the aftermath of armed conflict. The director makes a point of contrasting the varied pasts of his characters with the ethnic `purity' which motivated the senseless war. He has concocted an uplifting, understated little gem with most engaging young stars.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Adorable Romantic Comedy in an Unlikely Atmosphere ...
Comment: Labud ("Swan") is a lonely young man who was displaced by the 1990s Balkan War to Belgrade. He lives in a shelter and does odd jobs to make ends meet. He wants to reconnect with his old flame a hairdresser by trade named Vida who managed to escape after the war to Chicago. Swan tries meeting girls in Belgrade but most ignore him and look the other way. His last hope is to join a computer dating service, Happy Millenium. He provides details of what interests him and what he is looking for in the opposite sex after which he gets to view videos of close matches for a rendevous at a designated location. During one such meeting at the Happy Millenium office, Swan makes eye contact with a client, a lovely pretty girl named Romana who is about his age. The receptionist discourages such a face-to-face meeting stating, he can only meet anonomously with a client who has a letter/number designation and meets the criteria set up by the computer.

During the intervals when Swan is working and walking around Belgrade, he believes he sees Vida at times but shakes this thought from his mind knowing she is in Chicago. One of the best creative aspects of the film is how, he has imaginery conversations with the ghosts of his mother and old school professor who provide him advice and admonish him during his searches for love. Swan tries to get papers to legally leave Belgrade to visit Chicago but there is a long list and he does not meet the guidelines. Around this time, Vida really is in Belgrade looking for Swan and trying to revive their old love, the problem is she can not locate him. She leaves a note on a "missing persons" bulletin board. She just missed running into Swan in person.

During a computer-match rendevous Swan goes to the meeting location but quickly does a turn-around as his "match" is one of the older women whom he does not like. Later, he returns to the site only to find that Romana is standing there apparetnly waiting for someone. She is the one he was interested in the most at the computer dating service. He introduces himself and they gradually hit it off. She tries very hard to impress him with her knowledge of Belgrade slang and the cool hang out places in the city. Swan follows her one night after a date, and discovers she lives in similar straits as himself, doing menial work at a restaurant. He confronts her and they have a heart-to-heart talk, understanding both are refugees from the Balkan War, trying to make their way in the world. Romana has ghostly advisers of her own, her sister, her father, and old lover and various other relatives from the past. They comment on her activities and keep advising her on the "dos"and "don'ts" of relationships.

The film comes to a climax when the Happy Millenium group has an excursion where the clientel mix and match during a dance at the seaside ... Different couples intermingle and the antics are hilarious. The leader of the Happy Millenium group tries to keep the peace and balance out the relationships. At some point in the distant past, Swan and Romana had a falling out due to circumstances and cultural differences which were pointed out by their "ghosts". Both Swan and Romana had advisers who aided and abbetted in breaking up their relationship. Essentially the couple was miserable without each other ... Around this time, Swan was given a letter from a Happy Millenium client who picked it up off the missing persons bulletin board - it was from Vida. The film does a terrific wind-up ending, tying up all the loose ends of the film into a very satisfying finish for everyone involved. Along the way, one discovers some fascinating bits of "family secrets" as the ghostly visitors reminisce about their past. This is one outstanding film. It will impress anyone who loves romantic comedy which mixes cultural differences within a surreal atmosphere. Erika Borsos (pepper flower)

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Imaginative, Literary Romantic Comedy--a first class effort
Comment: first-class effort by Radivoje Andric, a young Serb director about couples in love during the Yugoslav conflict. At times sentimental, the story and incidents are original, imaginative and the characters are great too. A Serb intellectual who lives a desolate life as a political refugee in Belgrade misses his girlfriend who has emigrated to America. He imagines that his girlfriend is with her to keep him company, and then he imagines a whole cast of people from his past to keep him company during his homeless wanderings through Belgrade. We're never quite sure of how deluded he is; does the girl really exist? Are they really engaged? Then he meets a girl-a real girl-not an imaginary one- who forces him to deal with his realities and make choices. This film-which took a long time to be made because of the Yugoslavia conflict-doesn't get bogged down in politics-but it shows the effects of these events on ordinary people. Too bad it couldn't have been released (for example) in 1999 to give Americans a glimpse of Yugoslavs as a people not merely as a patchwork of ethnic tribes at war with one another. The settings and situations are bleak, but the people are charming, a mixture of the old-fashioned and hip. Don't miss the "computerized dating service" scenes and the matchmaker-they are great fun, if not a little sad. The female lead, Ivana Bolanca is charming and mysterious and vulnerable. Senad Alihodzic, the male lead is thoughtful, happy-go-lucky and bursting with poetry and optimism. I found myself wishing the scenes with imaginary characters could be shortened a bit, and that Ivan Bolanca's character could be fleshed out a bit-she too seemed like a mere romantic projection sometimes. Still, America needs more dreamers like Radivoje Andric to make movies.


Editorial Reviews:

It is 1995 post war Croatia and handsome, lonely Labud misses his girlfriend Vida, when the lovers were separated during the Balkins war. He hopes to reunite with her, but knows the chances are such that they never will. After a series of disasterous dates, from a computer dating service, he finally meets and falls in love with the beautiful Romana. This lovely and funny romantic film shows refugees trying to eke out a normal life against the strange and scary landscape of a post-war country.


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