Savrseni krug
Ademir Kenovic

Adis and his deaf-mute brother, Kerim, survived the massacre of their parents by the Serbian militia. In search of their aunt, they go to Sarajevo and take up refuge at Hamza's: a poet living alone since his wife and daughter left. The poet refuses to leave the city under siege, but accepts to take in the two boys and then help them leave Sarajevo.
With : Mustafa Nadarevic, Almedin Leleta, Almir Podgorica, Josip Pejakovic, Jasna Diklic
Screenplay : Ademir Kenovic, Abdulah Sidran, Pjer Zalica
Image : Milenko Uherka
Sound : David Baksht
Music : Esad Arnautalic et Ranko Rithman
Editing : Christel Tanovic
Screenplay : Ademir Kenovic, Abdulah Sidran, Pjer Zalica
Image : Milenko Uherka
Sound : David Baksht
Music : Esad Arnautalic et Ranko Rithman
Editing : Christel Tanovic
Production : Parnasse international, Dokument Sarajevo
Distribution: Rosem Films
Distribution: Rosem Films
Ademir Kenovic‘s first film is about the dividing up of Yugoslavia after the Dayton Accords. He wanted to give it "an authenticity (he) never saw in the TV reports: illustrating the effects of war on human beings, their "abnormal", unpredictable behaviors. Not in documentary form, but inside a story. (...) We had to shoot some of the scenes under the protection of anti-sniper units and mine-clearing specialists. (...) The whole city knew about it. The filming was, for everyone, an incredible sign that the war was over." The Perfect Circle, Kenovic's fourth feature film was selected for Cannes as was An Additional Soul (1991) and Man, God, the Monster (1994).