News Accreditation Supporters DokuLab DokuKino DokuTech
Twitter Facebook Vimeo

ŽELIMIR ŽILNIK RETROSPECTIVE

The Old School of Capitalism

Stara škola kapitalizma

Directors

Želimir Žilnik

Producers

Sarita Matijević

Cinematographers

Miodrag Milosević

Editors

Vuk Vukmirović

Contact

Contact:
Želimir Žilnik
Njegoseva 16/17,
21000 Novi Sad, Serbia
[email protected]

The Old School of Capitalism

1

2

3

4

5

2009

Serbia

122 min

Color

The Old School of Capitalism is rooted in the first wave of workers revolts to hit Serbia since the advent of capitalism. Desperate workers bulldoze through factory gates and are devastated to discover the site looted by the bosses. Eccentrically escalating confrontations, including a melee with workers in football shoulder-pads and helmets and boss and his security force in bulletproof vests, prove fruitless. Committed young anarchists offer solidarity, take the bosses hostage. A Russian tycoon, a Wall Street trader and US VP Biden’s visit to Belgrade unexpectedly complicate events that lead toward a final shock. Along the way, the film produces an increasingly complex and yet unfailingly lively account of present-day, in fact, up-to-the-minute struggles under the misery-inducing effects of both local and global capital.

Director

Born in 1942, based in Novi Sad, Serbia, his socially engaged films and documentaries in former Yugoslavia earned him critical accolades in the late 60s (“The Unemployed” 1968, Best Documentary at the Oberhausen festival, 1968; “Early Works”1969, Best Film at Berlin Film Festival), but also censorship in the 70s for his unflinching criticism of the government apparatus.
Low budget filmmaking and challenging political themes mark Žilnik’s prolific career that includes over 50 feature and documentary films and shorts. His power to observe and unleash compelling narratives out of the lives of ordinary people is the common thread throughout his documentary and docudrama work. More recently, his focus has shifted beyond the divided Balkans to question its relationship with the tightening controls of European borders, delving into the heart of issues of refugees and migrants.

More films in ŽELIMIR ŽILNIK RETROSPECTIVE

Show All

Showtimes

No Showtimes