Days of Dreams (Serbian: Дани од снова, translit. Dani od snova) is a 1980 Yugoslav drama film directed by Vlatko Gilic. It competed in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival.
Il y a 11 films ayant les mêmes acteurs, 67823 ayant les mêmes genres cinématographiques (dont 13340 ayant exactement les mêmes 2 genres que Dani od snova), pour avoir au final 70 suggestions de films similaires.
Si vous avez aimé Dani od snova, vous aimerez sûrement les films similaires suivants :
, 2h5 Réalisé parStole Popov OrigineMacedoine GenresDrame, Action, Policier ActeursSvetozar Cvetković, Meto Jovanovski, Vladislava Milosavljević, Olivera Katarina, Ratko Tankosić Note75% Le film raconte l'histoire de deux frères, Dragoslav et Kosta Kovacevski. Dragoslav revient d'URSS et, accusé à tort, il est emprisonné. Kosta, qui n'est intéressé que par l'argent, tente de quitter la Macédoine pour l'Occident. Dragoslav a une petite amie, Vera, mais lorsque celui-ci apprend qu'elle est une espionne soviétique, elle se suicide.
, 1h32 GenresDrame ActeursBranislav Trifunović, Darko Rundek, Andrija Milošević, Svetozar Cvetković, Irfan Mensur, Sergej Trifunović Note48% The main character Marijana is a beautiful 25-year-old girl. When she was 16 her father's boss sexually abused her. Marijana's father progressed his career (as a gynaecologist willing to perform illegal abortions) due to his boss's assistance and did nothing about the abuse.
, 1h22 GenresDrame, Action, Policier ActeursRadoslav Milenković, Boris Komnenić, Goran Radaković Note66% The film is about Vlada Vasiljević, a citizen of Belgrade, that in 1979 stole a white Porsche-Targa 911-s, and then, for about ten evenings drove the police crazy with his reckless driving to the Slavija Square. During an official visit of the president Tito to Cuba in 1979, the attention of the capital was directed to the Phantom in the white Porsche. The Mysterious driver that drove like crazy in a stolen car over the square Slavija made in the midnight hours a real spectacle, constantly managed to get away from the police. Over the radio he openly called the police to catch him, what was the first oppositional act in the post-war Yugoslavia. Several tens of thousand people went on the streets to support him.