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Tito and Me

Tito and Me

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Delightful Comic Treatment of Life under Communism
Review: "Tito i Ja" is the tale of Zoran, a young Serbian boy of the 50s who idolizes Yugoslavia's president and longs for the love of his schoolmate Jasna. A poem in honor of Tito earns our hero Zoran a place, with his beloved, in a Young Pioneer (Communist Scouts) hiking trip through Tito's Croatian homeland. The adventures which follow demonstrate Communism's evil attmept to place one citizen against another and the ability of the human spriit to overcome it.

"Tito i Ja" is a rare film, a comic gem with an enduring message about a system which ruled one third of the world and from which the world has not yet recovered. I would recommend it without reservation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Delightful!
Review: Full of kind-hearted humor, abounding in hilarious episodes, this film is touching and very enjoyable! Its familiar satirical portrayal of the ridiculousness of obsessions associated with the Communist regime in Eastern Europe is very low-key, highlighting the human and humanist sides of life. Dimitrije Vojnov (Zoran) is perfect for the role and gives an outstanding performance. Best to watch the film subtitled rather than dubbed to hear Zoran's narration which is wonderfully sweet and very, very funny. "Tito i ja" is a gem not to be missed!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tito and me
Review: I thought this was a very good movie,one of the best from Yugoslavia.It is a comedy,adventure and about Tito the Yugoslav president in the 1950's.The story talks about Zoran,a 10 year old boy who likes Tito and about his family.In the film there is always something new happening and that's what makes it interesting like for example when Zoran's class goes to Tito's birthplace there is always new scenes and with each scene you see something happening instead of just seeing them go to the birthplace it also tells us what is happening on the way there. It is a very enjoyable film.*****

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Delightful Comic Treatment of Life under Communism
Review: This is a generally amusing film, and the chubby little boy who plays the main character, Zoran, is very endearing. The movie centers around Zoran's misadventures as he tries to win the heart of the girl he has a crush on, which involves, among other things, writing a glowing paean to Yugoslavia's then president Tito as part of a school contest. His problems only get bigger after he wins the contest. The back-drop to all of this is Zoran's somewhat troubled family life, as he, his mother and father are cramped into an apartment together with relatives - which was a common aspect of Yugoslav urban life in the early 1950s when the country was being industrialized and people moved to the cities. The government often forcefully appropriated parts of larger houses or apartments and sometimes moved complete strangers in. However, one aspect of this movie is a bit dishonest: most of the adults in the film, except for Zoran's over-zealous schoolteacher, tend to be seasoned anti-Titoists. It seems a bit unrealistic to me to show people disparaging Tito during the early 1950s in the way he was criticized during the 1980s (after his death). The fact was that in the first few decades after World War II, Tito was very popular among all Yugoslavs, Serbs included. Thus, I'd say watch this film because it is funny and rather cute, but not to get an accurate picture of Belgrade's political climate in the 1950s.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: comedy, absurdity, and the idolization of heroes
Review: This is a political comedy by the director Goran Markovic, and is set in Belgrade, circa 1954. The film's lead character is an overweight ten year-old boy named Zoran who has a bizarre, fairytale-like obsession with the communist ruler of Yugoslavia, Tito. Zoran finds his chance to show both his love of this leader and to impress his crush in an essay contest (the topic: "Do You Love Comrade Tito and Why?") that not only allows Zoran to go on a march to meet Tito, but also to do so alongside Jasna, his crush. It is on this march that Zoran begins to lose faith in the ideals, as his pseudo- Boy Scout leader finds him to be annoying andrather stupid. In the end, Zoran is forced to face the disappointing truth that heroes are often not much more than self-constructed icons.

Markovic offers a clever commentary on the utter absurdity of the communist system through the eyes of a child, whose reflection and understanding of reality reveal the ridiculousness of the political system (it is hinted that one man has been a victim of the political purges, while aloud, it is said he is arrested) and the elevation of Tito. At times, the script was a little dry, but overall, an interesting film about this time in Yugoslavia's history, and worth the watch.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: some good history
Review: This was a very good film, I think it offers a good look at life during the time Tito was the president of Yugoslavia. There are some very humorous parts of this movie.


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