9 reviews
Beautiful women, legendary Bata Stojkovic and probably the best role of Slavko Stimac. Movie that never gets old.
8/10
8/10
- Bored_Dragon
- Apr 12, 2018
- Permalink
This is not a review but a correction of the English title, which is inaccurate. "Elusive" means difficult to find, catch, or achieve, difficult to remember or recall,indefinable, intangible, impalpable, or ambiguous. Serbian word "varljivo" primarily refers to frequently changing weather. This is quite clear from the movie dialogue when the judge mentions the summer and his young daughter characterizes it as "varljivo" because there are frequent rain showers. Figuratively, she might also imply the word to mean the political instability because of serious student protests all over Europe including Belgrade. She became interested in politics since she had a crush on a much older student who became involved in the protests.
The title would be much more accurate if the epithet used in front of "summer" were to be one of the following: precarious, variable, unstable, unbalanced, volatile.
The title would be much more accurate if the epithet used in front of "summer" were to be one of the following: precarious, variable, unstable, unbalanced, volatile.
- m-torres-61-319635
- Jul 22, 2014
- Permalink
This movie will always stay in my memory as one of the funniest and best comedies I ever saw back in former Yugoslavia. It centers around the eldest son (Stimac) of a family led by a strict authoritarian father in Danilo Bata Stojkovic's magnificent incarnation. The young Petar struggles to graduate from high school mainly for one reason-he is so infatuated with his Marxism teacher that he cannot think of anything else but her during the classes. So when the graduation time comes, he lies to his father about passing in all the subjects while in reality flunking in Marxism.
Of course, the truth is not easy to hide and when it eventually comes out, his father is appalled and decides to punish him and lead his mind off from girls by finding a job for him in a local bakery. But that becomes complicated too when it turns out a beautiful and voluptuous girl is working there and she is an easy catch as well! Complications and comical twists just keep coming and coming here and the laughter never ceases.
All this is going on during a very turbulent time, the '68 student revolution. My favorite scene is when Stojkovic throws out the TV because of the student uprising claiming it's immoral to watch it and then when Tito approves of the reforms he brings it back saying "Comrade Tito has said that the students are right. We can watch television again!" Paskaljevic was a master of socio comedy and all the actors do a great job. The ending is specially great and this is probably Slavko Stimac's best role.
Of course, the truth is not easy to hide and when it eventually comes out, his father is appalled and decides to punish him and lead his mind off from girls by finding a job for him in a local bakery. But that becomes complicated too when it turns out a beautiful and voluptuous girl is working there and she is an easy catch as well! Complications and comical twists just keep coming and coming here and the laughter never ceases.
All this is going on during a very turbulent time, the '68 student revolution. My favorite scene is when Stojkovic throws out the TV because of the student uprising claiming it's immoral to watch it and then when Tito approves of the reforms he brings it back saying "Comrade Tito has said that the students are right. We can watch television again!" Paskaljevic was a master of socio comedy and all the actors do a great job. The ending is specially great and this is probably Slavko Stimac's best role.
I have watched this movie several times, and it is never boring to see it from time to time..Set in 1968. in the time of student uprising in the former Yugoslavia, it's a really fine comedy, with nicely portrayed characters, and lots of very funny scenes/situations..Me and my family laughed in tears :o)This is one of the best Yugoslavian comedies shot after the WWII and before the war in 1991. Some scenes are shot in my hometown Subotica.:o)Comedies in which Danilo "Bata" Stojković acts are the one you shouldn't miss to watch. I recommend it to people from all over the world to watch it if they can purchase/get it.. I am sure that you won't be disappointed.
Following the Summer of Love in 1967, 1968 was vastly different. The assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Bobby Kennedy, the student uprising in Paris, the protest at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, the massacre of protesters in Mexico City right before the Olympics got held there, all culminating in Nixon's election.
Goran Paskaljević's "Varljivo leto '68" ("The Elusive Summer of '68" in English) indirectly looks at this. The protagonist is Petar, a teenage boy in Yugoslavia. His dad, while a Marxist, is nonetheless the type who thinks that the younger generation doesn't appreciate what the parents' generation did (sort of an Archie Bunker in that sense). Petar is flunking Marxism in school, due to his interest in women. This ranges from his teacher, to a young woman in a bakery (resulting in the movie's best scene). But this is all amid the turbulent events that took place that summer. Early in the movie the family sees the Paris uprising on the news, and towards the end there's news that the Warsaw Pact armies have entered Prague.
I'd say that this story could've taken place in almost any country. It's well known that the '60s were all about sexual awakening and protests, much of it scorned by the parents' generation. Indeed, the movie shows some of the protests that took place in Yugoslavia. We even hear "The Blue Danube" played while the family is on the beach (I wonder if this was a reference to "2001: A Space Odyssey").
Anyway, it's not a masterpiece, but still worth seeing. I don't know how widely available it is; I saw it online.
Goran Paskaljević's "Varljivo leto '68" ("The Elusive Summer of '68" in English) indirectly looks at this. The protagonist is Petar, a teenage boy in Yugoslavia. His dad, while a Marxist, is nonetheless the type who thinks that the younger generation doesn't appreciate what the parents' generation did (sort of an Archie Bunker in that sense). Petar is flunking Marxism in school, due to his interest in women. This ranges from his teacher, to a young woman in a bakery (resulting in the movie's best scene). But this is all amid the turbulent events that took place that summer. Early in the movie the family sees the Paris uprising on the news, and towards the end there's news that the Warsaw Pact armies have entered Prague.
I'd say that this story could've taken place in almost any country. It's well known that the '60s were all about sexual awakening and protests, much of it scorned by the parents' generation. Indeed, the movie shows some of the protests that took place in Yugoslavia. We even hear "The Blue Danube" played while the family is on the beach (I wonder if this was a reference to "2001: A Space Odyssey").
Anyway, it's not a masterpiece, but still worth seeing. I don't know how widely available it is; I saw it online.
- lee_eisenberg
- Nov 13, 2017
- Permalink
A communist romantic comedy who proves again in communism there's no such a thing as censorship. Whose who say there was censorship in communism are brainwashed by capitalistt propaganda.
- cosmin742000
- Apr 20, 2021
- Permalink
This whole film is basically a series of episodes where a horny youngster chases women. It is presented as a kind of coming of age story, but it's just a minimalist script with episodic structure. There are funny moments in it, but on the whole it's a rather empty experience. It is particularly problematic because it is ostensibly a family film, while in reality watching countless scenes with erotic content is likely to make a family viewing of the film a nightmare. Totally overrated film, and quite annoying at times. An irritating protagonist, too. I guess most people like it because of the iconic bakery scene, involving some hefty breast squeezing action.
This movie has a cult status in former Yugoslavia for no reason whatsoever. It's just one of many unsuccessful movies done by so-called Prague school directors ( Paskaljevic, Grlic, Karanovic) that were out of touch with modern cinema and the world itself.
- rinakarinaka
- Sep 25, 2020
- Permalink
This is not a good Yugoslav movie and certainly not a representative one. Main actors (mother and father) reprise their roles from Balkan Spy (albeit bloodless and pale here) and the rest doesn't even come near the wits of the movies based on Dusan Kovacevic's work (Balkan Spy, Who's Singin' There?, or Marathons) or other truly clever movies from the period before war on Balkans (for example, Underground). It's not even funny. A classic "coming of age" core topic was much better presented in any other (especially Italian) movie. In good (writing) hands, with different casting and so on this could have been a good movie. But it simply isn't. Pity.
- Maleplatypus
- Sep 24, 2022
- Permalink