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EVEN MET HAPPY GYPSIES (SKUPLJACI PERJA) (aka:
HAPPY GYPSIES)
(director/writer: Aleksandar
Petrovic; cinematographer: Tomislav Pinter;
editor: Mirjana
Mitic; music: Aleksandar Petrovic; cast: Bekim Fehmiu (Bora), Olivera Vuco (Lence), Bata Zivojinovic (Mirta), Gordana Jovanovic (Tisa), Mija Aleksic (Father Pavle), Rahela Ferari (nun), Milivoje Djordjevic (Sandor);
Runtime: 94; MPAA Rating: NR; Delta PAL format; 1967-Yugoslavia-in Serbian/Romany
with English subtitles) "Filled with gypsy atmosphere." Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Bora (Bekim Fehmiu, Yugoslavian leading man) is a flighty and volatile
traveling wheeler-dealer goose feather seller,
operating his business out of the impoverished gypsy
village of Vrsac, where he is married to
the long-suffering aging cabaret singer Lence (Olivera Vuco). Their children are
scattered all over Yugoslavia. The story centers around Bora
attracted to the illiterate goose caretaker
16-year-old aspiring
singer Tisa (Gordana Jovanovic), whose lecherous
stepfather is Mirta (Bata Zivojinovic). He's Bora's rival goose
feather seller, who made an arrangement with him to
divide up the nearby gypsy villages with each getting
ten territories to operate exclusively in. Mirta
arranges for Tisa to marry a 12-year-old gypsy boy
according to custom, but when he fails to perform his
marriage duties she unceremoniously dumps him while
both families stand outside their shack. After that
futility she runs away and gets into a series of
misadventures, one worse than the other and ends up
back in Mirta's clutches after seduced and beaten by
truck drivers she hitched a ride with. An angry Bora,
who married Tisa with a priest on one of her attempts
to escape the village, gets into a knife fight with
Mirta in his shed, where he keeps the goose feathers,
and kills him. It ends with Bora on the run from the
police, who come to look for him in the gypsy village
but get no help from the locals. It's a film that takes the
viewer who is not a gypsy into a foreign world that is
ugly, dangerous, and ignorant, but also shows there's
a real community among the gypsies and it's a
traditional world where they do not easily let
outsiders in. Therefore the value of the film is
mostly because it shows us an alien culture rarely
seen, keeps things authentic and spicy (even if not
nice), and flashes on occasion a wicked black humor.
It should be noted the production values are not good
and neither is the stiff acting, but that didn't stop
me from enjoying such an odd spectacle. REVIEWED ON 2/13/2012 GRADE: B+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |