6 reviews
Specijalno Vaspitanje (1977) (Special Education)
Low budget, down to earth, serious, personal and also quite cute Serbian drama about a community in a juvenile/abandoned kids educational center located on the outskirts of Belgrade. It's centered around two juvenile "inmates" (one fairly experienced and one fresh-cut) and their relationship with a new pedagogue in life they share inside and outside the juvenile center. It's grainy and realistic - typical of the cinema of that era, and with some great 70s funk!
Specijalno Vaspitanje is pretty much great little ''real socialism" movie.
8/10.
Low budget, down to earth, serious, personal and also quite cute Serbian drama about a community in a juvenile/abandoned kids educational center located on the outskirts of Belgrade. It's centered around two juvenile "inmates" (one fairly experienced and one fresh-cut) and their relationship with a new pedagogue in life they share inside and outside the juvenile center. It's grainy and realistic - typical of the cinema of that era, and with some great 70s funk!
Specijalno Vaspitanje is pretty much great little ''real socialism" movie.
8/10.
- deckokojiobecava
- Mar 17, 2015
- Permalink
Truly one of the greatest movie of the EX-YU cinematography. Original length of the movie was 160 minutes, and as requested, the director Goran Markovic had to lose the 50 minutes of the movie. That was requested by the movie theaters. We are still waiting for the directors cut. There are some 50 minutes of scenes that was ejected from the original film. The film and television production house "Koutnjak film" have this scenes in a storage and we are awaiting for someone to make that directors cut with those, by the words of the director Goran Markovic, best scenes from the original movie. The scenes contain some funny stuff and some pretty stuff.
This movie is great picture of socialistic juvenile homes.One of the best movies of that time.Enjoy in movie if you have it or better find it somewhere and take a look!Enjoy!Bekim Fehmiu had historical role in this master piece of Yugoslav cinematography.These stories were amazing for directors.They had full inspiration in juvenile homes which were full of various social cases(murders,drugs,pillages,small robberies etc.).Slavko Stimac was here an ideal little troublemaker,but when he came into that juvenile homes,he saw that there far bigger troublemakers.You can see that Yugoslav country have taken care for those who were social problems or abandoned.
- pavlodonix
- Jun 17, 2007
- Permalink
The Special Education is a 1977 Yugoslav juvenile drama film directed by an acclaimed director Goran Markovic.
The story revolves around a group of problematic teenagers placed in a juvenile detention center, and their tough but sympathetic new teacher/guardian.
While the film offers quite a bit of fun and humour, with vibrant and interesting characters, it also serves as a social commentary. Markovic perfectly understands the way a juvenile brain works, and the nature of urban life.
However, behind this fun, humorous facade lies a serious critique of the social system in ex-Yugoslavia. The characters are split into two groups: Senior professors, the principal and the students/inmates along with their new guardian Zabac. Zabac serves as a defiant force, constantly rebellious and critical towards the senior teachers and the principal, who are completely unaware of the conditions in which the inmates are living, what kind of food do they eat as well as their very safety and psychological health. The teachers and the principal spend time drinking coffee, planting trees and pretending like the juvenile centre is doing well, while in reality the whole system is at the edge of collapse. The inmates are forced to eat dog food because the principal refuses to aquire better food, the professors are ready to institutionalise a perfectly healthy young man, the principal is planting palms while the inmates are having a bloody brawl just a few feet away from him. The system is rotten, ignorant and completely careless of the inmates' needs.
Guardian Zabac comes as a rebellious figure, a younger man with new methods, a caring man who dares to put the inmates before himself (convinces the principal that a boy is not mentally ill, buys the inmates some better food out of his own pocket, breaks fights, teaches inmates to respect each other). This immediately puts him into a conflict with the principal and other senior professors, who see him as an unneeded outliner and a dissident.
The story serves as an allegory to the times in which it was written. The Detention Centre is Yugoslavia, and the Principal and senior professors are the government. The film offers a brave critique of the system that's becoming increasingly bureaucratic, elitistic, isolated and ignorant of the people's needs. This came in the time in which criticising the system could give you serious problems (from financial punishments and political harrasments to prison sentences or deportations).
Goran Markovic gives a bold, brave social commentary that reveals some long ignored social and political problems in Tito's one-party dictatorship while also serving as a deep but fun juvenile drama, and serves as one of the prime examples of the greatness of Yugoslav cinema.
While the film offers quite a bit of fun and humour, with vibrant and interesting characters, it also serves as a social commentary. Markovic perfectly understands the way a juvenile brain works, and the nature of urban life.
However, behind this fun, humorous facade lies a serious critique of the social system in ex-Yugoslavia. The characters are split into two groups: Senior professors, the principal and the students/inmates along with their new guardian Zabac. Zabac serves as a defiant force, constantly rebellious and critical towards the senior teachers and the principal, who are completely unaware of the conditions in which the inmates are living, what kind of food do they eat as well as their very safety and psychological health. The teachers and the principal spend time drinking coffee, planting trees and pretending like the juvenile centre is doing well, while in reality the whole system is at the edge of collapse. The inmates are forced to eat dog food because the principal refuses to aquire better food, the professors are ready to institutionalise a perfectly healthy young man, the principal is planting palms while the inmates are having a bloody brawl just a few feet away from him. The system is rotten, ignorant and completely careless of the inmates' needs.
Guardian Zabac comes as a rebellious figure, a younger man with new methods, a caring man who dares to put the inmates before himself (convinces the principal that a boy is not mentally ill, buys the inmates some better food out of his own pocket, breaks fights, teaches inmates to respect each other). This immediately puts him into a conflict with the principal and other senior professors, who see him as an unneeded outliner and a dissident.
The story serves as an allegory to the times in which it was written. The Detention Centre is Yugoslavia, and the Principal and senior professors are the government. The film offers a brave critique of the system that's becoming increasingly bureaucratic, elitistic, isolated and ignorant of the people's needs. This came in the time in which criticising the system could give you serious problems (from financial punishments and political harrasments to prison sentences or deportations).
Goran Markovic gives a bold, brave social commentary that reveals some long ignored social and political problems in Tito's one-party dictatorship while also serving as a deep but fun juvenile drama, and serves as one of the prime examples of the greatness of Yugoslav cinema.
- alexbozic-58933
- Feb 3, 2021
- Permalink